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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Inspector of Taxes v Pumahaven Ltd. [2003] EWCA Civ 700 (08 May 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/700.html Cite as: [2003] STI 966, [2003] STC 890, [2003] BTC 275, [2003] EWCA Civ 700, 75 TC 300 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY DIVISION
(Mr Justice Park)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TUCKEY
LORD JUSTICE KEENE
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JAMES WILLIAMS (INSPECTOR OF TAXES) | Appellant/Appellant | |
-v- | ||
PUMAHAVEN LIMITED | Respondent/Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR KEVIN PROSSER QC and MISS ELIZABETH WILSON (instructed by Mr C Millar-Downs, Surrey RH4 1BQ ) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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(AS APPROVED BY THE COURT)
Crown Copyright ©
Thursday, 8th May 2003
(1) On 16th August 1996 Pumahaven agreed to let to another company in the group (BGI) all the properties occupied by other companies in the group for a rent payable annually on 31st August.
(2) On 30th August 1996 Pumahaven and BGI agreed to alter the 1996 rental date to 19th September 1996.
(3) On 18th September 1996 Pumahaven sold to a company outside the group all its assets, with the exception of the right to the rent due on 19th September 1996.
(4) Pumahaven drew up accounts to 18th September 1996, so that a new accounting period began on 19th September 1996, when it received the 1996 rent amounting to some £112 million.
(5) Other steps were then taken intended to create in Pumahaven a right to a tax deduction under the loan relationship provisions of the Finance Act 1996, balanced by a corresponding commercial gain intended to be outside the scope of Corporation Tax.
" ... apply to the Commissioners for a determination of the amount of tax the payment of which should be postponed pending the determination of the appeal".
By section 55(5) an application under section 55(3) is to be heard and determined in the same way as the appeal. Section 55(6) provides so far as material:
"The amount of tax the payment of which shall be postponed pending the determination of the appeal shall be the amount (if any) in which it appears to the Commissioners, having regard to the representations made and any ... evidence adduced, that there are reasonable grounds for believing that the appellant is overcharged to tax."
"Although section 55(5) provides that this application is to be heard and determined in the same way as an appeal, I am not required to determine the appeal. Also, section 55(6) refers to 'reasonable grounds for believing that' the Appellant is overcharged. That means that the Appellant at this stage does not have to prove all the facts or succeed in all the legal arguments which will have to be proved or established at the hearing of the substantive appeal. Thus my limited task is to determine whether the Appellant has demonstrated reasonable grounds for believing that it is overcharged to tax. However, section 55(6) does require me to have some firm basis for believing that the Appellant has been overcharged by the assessment and here I must have regard to the evidence adduced."
"The High Court or, as the case may be, the Court of Appeal shall hear and determine any question of law arising on an appeal under subsection (1) or (2) above and may reverse, affirm or vary the decision appealed against, or remit the matter to the Special Commissioners with the Court's opinion on it, or make such other order in relation to the matter as the Court thinks fit."
"I do not agree with those submissions. Under the statute the evaluation of whether there are reasonable grounds for believing that Pumahaven was or may have been overcharged to tax is a responsibility allocated to the Commissioners. I do not think that it would be right for me to decide that question myself. I suppose that I might have been tempted otherwise if the argument had been such palpable nonsense that it was instantly obvious that it could not possibly be right. Such arguments do occasionally surface before the Commissioners or in the courts, usually put forward by taxpayers in person, but the source doctrine argument was not of that character."
"There is scope for an argument not to be palpable nonsense but still to stop short of affording reasonable grounds for believing that the taxpayer may have been overcharged."
The judge said that, in declining to decide for himself whether the source argument was right or wrong, he was influenced by the case of R v Hastings and Bexhill General Commissioners ex parte Goodacre [1994] STC 799. In that case the General Commissioners had made a procedural error in wrongly refusing to grant an adjournment and, on an application for judicial review, Schiemann J quashed the refusal, adding that the fact that the taxpayer might not be successful was not a matter with which the court was concerned: what the court was concerned with was to ensure that the taxpayer had a fair opportunity of presenting his case. Park J said that had he been dealing with Pumahaven's case on an application for judicial review rather than on an appeal, the Goodacre case strongly suggested that he should quash the Special Commissioner's decision and leave the matter on the basis that a new decision was to be reached by the Special Commissioner and that the underlying issue should not be decided by him.
Order: Appeal dismissed with costs summarily assessed in the sum specified in the schedule.