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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Jerome v HM Inspector of Taxes [2002] EWCA Civ 1879 (20 December 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/1879.html Cite as: [2003] STI 31, [2003] 3 EGCS 126, [2003] BTC 52, [2003] 2 EGLR 73, [2003] 24 EG 163, [2002] EWCA Civ 1879, [2003] STC 206 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION (Mr Justice Park)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE HALE
and
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
____________________
MICHAEL JEROME |
Appellant/ Respondent in the Court of Appeal |
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- and - |
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H J KELLY (HM INSPECTOR OF TAXES) |
Respondent/ Appellant in the Court of Appeal |
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Mr Robert Venables QC and Mrs Amanda Hardy (instructed by Messrs Stokes) for the Appellant/Respondent in the Court of Appeal
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker :
INTRODUCTION
"27. Time of disposal and acquisition where asset disposed of under contract
(1) Where an asset is disposed of and acquired under a contract the time at which the disposal and acquisition is made is the time the contract is made (and not, if different, the time at which the asset is conveyed or transferred).
This subsection has effect subject to .... subsection (2) below.
(2) If the contract is conditional .... the time at which the disposal and acquisition is made is the time at which the condition is satisfied."
"If A enters into an unconditional contract to sell land to B, and in the interval between contract and completion transfers his residual beneficial interest in the land, subject to and with the benefit of the contract, to C (e.g. by means of a declaration of trust), who is treated as disposing of the land for CGT purposes when the contract is completed in accordance with its original terms by a conveyance from A to B? Is it A, as the Revenue contends and the Special Commissioner held? Or is it C, as [the taxpayer] contends and Park J has now held?"
THE FACTS
the taxpayer's brother one half
the taxpayer one eighth
Mrs Jerome one eighth
Codan one quarter.
the taxpayer one quarter
Mrs Jerome one quarter
Codan one half.
S.46(1) OF THE 1979 ACT
"46. Nominees and bare trustees
(1) In relation to assets held by a person as nominee for another person, or as trustee for another person absolutely entitled as against the trustee .... (or for two or more persons who are .... jointly so entitled), this Act shall apply as if the property were vested in, and the acts of the nominee or trustee in relation to the assets were the acts of, the person or persons for whom he is the nominee or trustee ...."
THE DECISION
"That analysis of the effect of s.46 [being the analysis set out above] identifies the deemed vendors for capital gains tax purposes but does not decide whether the deemed vendors were those who were deemed to own the three plots before the six assignments of 15 December 1989 or after. Here the deeming provisions in s.27 are relevant. Section 27 is in very clear terms and it is not difficult to apply it to the facts of this appeal. Plots 1, 2 and 3 were disposed of under the contract of 16 April 1987. Accordingly, the section provides that that was the time at which the disposal was made. It follows that that was the date which identified the disposal including the parties to the disposal and their interests in the property the subject of the disposal. The fact that, after the date of the contract and before completion, the taxpayer and Mrs Jerome assigned parts of their beneficial interests to the trustee cannot alter that analysis." (Emphasis supplied.)
THE JUDGMENT
"There are several points I wish to make now about the section. (i) The subsection which matters in this case is subsection (1). Mr Venables and Mr Henderson agree, and so do I, that the contract for the sale of the Bridge Farm land to Conder was an unconditional contract. .... (ii) Subsection (1) does not enact that the contract is the disposal. On the contrary, by referring to an asset being disposed of 'under' a contract it clearly indicates that the disposal is something different from the contract. So the disposal is the completion, not the prior contract. If there never is a completion there never is a disposal. If there is a completion there is a disposal, and it is the transfer on completion which is the disposal. However, for the purposes of timing the disposal is related back to the prior contract under which it is made. .... (iii) The subsection, though it does not use the words 'deemed' or 'treated', is a deeming provision. It deems something which in fact happened at one time to have happened, so far as CGT is concerned, at a different time. However, that is all that it does in the way of deeming. I shall return to this, but I say now that, in my judgment and contrary to the opinion of Dr Brice, it does not deem anything about who is the person who makes the disposal. (iv) The section readily covers the normal case where the person who owns the asset makes the contract to dispose of it and later, at the time for completion of that contract, completes the contract in accordance with its terms. I imagine that was the only situation which the draftsman had in mind. There can, however, be situations where something else happens between contract and completion, so that the facts are more complicated than the normal ones. The present case is an example. However, in my opinion it would be unrealistic for me to approach the case by asking myself what the draftsman intended for a situation such as the one with which I am concerned. In my view the draftsman did not think about the situation at all, and had no intention about it."
"I agree that, by virtue of s.27(1), the date of the contract (16 April 1987) was the time at which the disposal was made. I do not agree that the date 'identified the disposal'. I am not sure that I understand what Dr Brice means by that expression. If she means that, once s.27(1) has specified that the date of the contract is the time of the disposal, the subsection also has the effect that the contract itself was the disposal, I do not agree. .... I certainly do not agree that the date of 16 April 1987 identified the parties to the disposal."
"I agree with Mr Venables. Section 27(1) may deem a disposal actually made at one time to have been made at another time, but it does not deem a disposal which actually was made by one person to have been made by another person."
"Before the A to B contract A was the owner of the property for all CGT purposes. After the A to B contract the incidents of A's ownership of the property had changed – he now owned it subject to and with the benefit of a contract with a third party – but he had not made a CGT disposal of it, and it must follow that he was still the owner of it for all CGT purposes. By his contract with and transfer to C in year 2 he transferred to C all the attributes of his position in relation to the property: legal ownership, the obligation to transfer to B in year 3, the right to receive 1000 from B in year 3, the rights of occupation, of receipt of rents and the like in the meantime, and the obligations of maintenance and meeting outgoings in the meantime. That package of rights and obligations was exactly what A had before his transaction with C, and it was regarded for CGT as ownership of the property. It was exactly that package which A transferred to C, and got paid for, in year 2. The subsequent transfer by C to B in year 3 did not retrospectively change what had happened in year 2. There was a real disposal of the property by A to C in year 2. The disposal had real economic effects. I do not accept that s.27(1) has the effect that, because of what happened in year 3, the A to C transaction is deprived of all CGT consequences." (Emphasis supplied.)
"[27] I have two comments to make about this argument. First, in any situation where a deeming provision requires something to be treated as happening at a time when in fact it did not happen, there is always a possibility of apparently incongruous results arising: the possibility is inherent in the tax proceeding on the basis of a counter-factual hypothesis. Second, the anomaly of taxing C in an earlier year than might have seemed the natural year to tax him is as nothing compared to the anomalies which arise on the Revenue's approach. .... In short, on Mr Henderson's analysis a gain of 200 is made by C but is not taxed on C: instead, A is taxed on gain of 900, but has made a gain of only 700. By way of contrast, on Mr Venables' analysis each taxpayer is taxed on his true gain, even if one of them is taxed on it for a somewhat unnatural year.
[28] Mr Henderson does make a forceful point when he observes that C might have been C Ltd, and might not even have existed in year 1. I see the point, but it would not drive me to adopting the unrealities of the Revenue's argument. In any event, it may not be correct that C Ltd would escape tax if it had not existed in year 1: it might be taxed for the earliest year in which it did exist….."
"[A]s Mr Venables pointed out, there is no advantage to the Revenue in pursuing that possibility. What the Revenue want is an argument on the basis of which they can justify taxing A for year 1 by reference to the disposal to B which is made in year 3. To have any possibility of such an argument they have to get into s.27(1), and to do that they need to say that the disposal by C to B is a disposal under the A to B contract of year 1. I do not agree with them that, if they do get into s.27(1), it takes them to the destination which they want, but they would not even get to the starting point of their argument if they said that the disposal in year 3 was not a disposal under the year 1 contract."
"I believe the CGT consequences are as follows. (i) The making by N in year 1 of the contract to sell the property to B is treated for CGT purposes as an act of A: at the time he is the person for whom N 'is' the nominee. However, the contract has no CGT consequences when it is made, because it is a contract to make a disposal, and no disposal has been made 'under' it as yet: see s.27(1). (ii) The completed assignment in year 2 by A to C of A's entire equitable interest in the property is treated by virtue of s.46 as a disposal by A of the property for the actual consideration of 800. A makes a gain in year 2 of 700, and is assessable to CGT on 700 for that year. (iii) The transfer by N in year 3 of the property to B is a disposal of the property, but for CGT it is a disposal by C. That is the result of s.46, and of the fact that in year 3 the person for whom N 'is' nominee is C. Therefore N's act of transferring the property to B is taken for CGT purposes to have been C's act. C makes an actual gain of 200 on the disposal, and in my opinion that gain is taxed on C, not on A. Since it accrues on a disposal under a contract made in year 1 (the N to B contract) the time of the disposal is taken to have been year 1: s.27(1). Therefore C is in principle liable to CGT for year 1 on his gain of 200. I do not accept that s.27(1) has the effect of treating the gain which actually accrues to C as if it had accrued to A, or of treating the disposal proceeds of 1000, which were actually received by N as nominee for C, as if they had been received by A." (Emphasis supplied.)
"[37] One of the hypothetical cases which I have considered in the foregoing paragraphs has these essential characteristics: (1) at the outset A does not hold the legal title to the property himself, but rather N, a nominee, holds it on trust for A absolutely; (2) the disposal by A to C in year 2 is a disposal of the equitable interest in the property, so that the legal title remains vested in N, being by year 2 subject to and with the benefit of the contract of sale made in year 1 between N (as nominee for A at that time) and B; (3) the disposal by A to C in year 2 is not an arm's length sale, but rather is a gift; (4) C is not resident in the United Kingdom. For that combination of assumptions my key conclusions are: (a) the transfer of the property by N to B in year 3 is for CGT purposes a disposal by C (the person for whom N 'is' the nominee: s.46(1); (b) although that disposal by C might be deemed by s.27(1) to have been made in year 1, that is immaterial to C since C is a non-resident; and (c), most importantly, that disposal by C is not deemed by s.27(1) to have been a disposal made by A. It follows that, although A is assessable to CGT for year 2 by reference to his disposal to C made during that year, he is not assessable for year 1 by reference to the disposal to B which is completed by N's transfer to B made in year 3.
[38] In my judgment the hypothetical case which I have identified in the previous paragraph is in principle the same as the actual case under appeal before me. The equivalent of the hypothetical property is not the entire beneficial interest in the part of Bridge Farm which was sold, but the undivided shares in that part which were assigned to the Bermudian trustee (a one-quarter undivided share in the main part of the property and a one-half undivided share in the additional 0.9 acres). The equivalent of A are [the taxpayer] and Mrs Jerome in their beneficial capacities as tenants in common. The equivalent of N are the trustees for sale – [the taxpayer] and Oliver Jerome as respects that main part of the land, and [the taxpayer] and Mrs Jerome, in their trustee capacities rather than their beneficial capacities, as respects the 0.9 acres. The equivalent of B was originally Conder and became Crest when Conder assigned to Crest the benefit of the contract to purchase Bridge Farm. The equivalent of C is the trustee of the two Bermudian settlements to which on 15 December 1989 [the taxpayer] and Mrs Jerome assigned undivided shares in part of Bridge Farm, the property being at that time subject to and with the benefit of the uncompleted contract for it to be sold to Conder/Crest. The equivalent of year 1 is 1987-88, when the contract of sale to Conder was made. The equivalent of year 2 is 1989-90, when [the taxpayer] and Mrs Jerome assigned undivided shares in Bridge Farm to the Bermudian trustee. There are three equivalents of year 3: 1990-91, 1991-92, and 1992-93, in each of which years a different tranche of the land at Bridge Farm was transferred to Crest." (Emphasis supplied.)
"[39] The question directly raised on this appeal is whether [the taxpayer] is assessable to CGT for 1987-88 (year 1) on the basis that s.27(1) deems him and Mrs Jerome to have made in that year the three disposals which were actually made (or, by virtue of s.46(1), treated as having been made) by the Bermudian trustee in 1990-91, 1991-92 and 1992-93. For the reasons which I have endeavoured to explain in this judgment I respectfully disagree with Dr Brice, the Special Commissioner, that s.27(1) had that deeming effect. Neither by virtue of s.27(1) nor by virtue of any other provision did [the taxpayer] and Mrs Jerome make, nor were they deemed to make, any CGT disposal in 1987-88 in the undivided shares in part of Bridge Farm which they subsequently assigned to the Bermudian trustee. I consider that the assessment which was made on [the taxpayer] for that year was, to that extent, not justified, and I shall allow the appeal accordingly."
THE ARGUMENTS ON THIS APPEAL
The Revenue's arguments
The taxpayer's arguments
"Although nowhere expressly stated, it is clear that the capital gains tax legislation works on the principle that the doctrine of the estate contract is to be disregarded in determining whether there has been a disposal of the property contracted to be sold. Indeed, any other rule would be unworkable. It is only when there is an actual disposal (on completion) that a disposal occurs for capital gains tax purposes. It follows that, pending completion, the vendor is to be regarded for capital gains tax purposes as remaining the unencumbered beneficial owner of the property, given that the disposal by him of part of the beneficial interest to the purchaser is to be disregarded."
CONCLUSIONS
"Once the position is reached that an order for specific performance could have been made against the legal owner if the matter had been brought before the court, thereafter the legal owner holds the property shorn of those rights in the property which courts of equity would decree belong to another."
".... the Act [applies] to dispositions of assets by disponors, regardless of the length of time for which they may have owned the assets prior to the disposals, but does not apply, subject to express provision, in circumstances where, prior to the disposition, the disponor had no asset."
".... and it must follow that he was still the owner of it for all CGT purposes".
RESULT
Lady Justice Hale :
Lord Justice Schiemann :