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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Smith v Smith & Anor [2004] EWCA Civ 1318 (19 October 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/1318.html Cite as: [2005] 1 WLR 1318, [2004] EWCA Civ 1318 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM COMMISSIONER P.L. HOWELL Q.C.
THE CHILD SUPPORT COMMISSIONERS
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE RT. HON. LORD JUSTICE WALL
and
THE RT. HON. SIR MARTIN NOURSE
____________________
ROBERT SMITH |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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HELEN SMITH and SECRETARY OF STATE FOR WORK AND PENSIONS |
Respondents |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Nicholas Mostyn Q.C. and Giles Goodfellow Q.C. acted Pro Bono for the First Respondent (instructed by Family Law Partnership, also acting pro bono)
Nathalie Lieven (instructed by the Office of the Solicitor, Department of Works & Pensions) for the Second Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Ward :
Introduction
The issues.
The facts in a little more detail.
"In calculating a self-employed trader's earnings for child support purposes, is he or is he not entitled to any deduction for capital depreciation or capital allowances?"
The Child Support Act 1991 and the regulations made thereunder.
"(1) Subject to sub-paragraphs (2) and (3) and to paragraph 4, "earnings" in the case of employment as a self-employed earner means the gross receipts of the employment …
(3) There shall be deducted from the gross receipts referred to in sub-paragraph (1) –
(a) any expenses which are reasonably incurred and are wholly and exclusively defrayed for the purposes of the earner's business …
(b) any value added tax …
(c) any amount in respect of income tax determined in accordance with sub-paragraph 5;
(d) any amount in respect of National Insurance contributions …
(e) one-half of any premium paid in respect of a retirement annuity contract or a personal pension scheme.
(4) For the purposes of sub-paragraph (3)(a) – …
(b) such expenses do not include – …
(ii) any capital expenditure;
(iii) the depreciation of any capital asset; …
(5) For the purposes of sub-paragraph (3)(c) the amount of income tax to be allowed against earnings shall be calculated as if those earnings, less any personal allowance applicable to the earner under Chapter 1 of Part VII of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 (Personal Relief) … were assessable to income tax at the rates of tax applicable at the effective date. …"
"The government believes that changes are needed to the system to ensure that it is more widely acceptable to absent parents and that more maintenance is actually paid to parents with care."
"The government has decided that changes are needed to prevent undue hardship and to enable the Child Support Agency to operate effectively."
Peres the child support officer to make a fresh maintenance assessment. In practice the Secretary of State refers applications for departure directions to the Appeal Tribunal as that enables both parties to appear, to be represented and fully and properly to put their respective cases. Unfortunately it all takes time as this case has demonstrated.
"A person's life-style is inconsistent with the level of his income."
"(1) Subject to paragraph (2), a case shall constitute a case for the purposes of paragraph 5(1) of Schedule 4B to the Act where the Secretary of State is satisfied that the current maintenance assessment is based upon a level of income of the non-applicant which is substantially lower than the level of income required to support the overall life-style of that non-applicant. …"
"As I said earlier, these make a small number of amendments to the secondary legislation, which provides the structure of the child support scheme. For the most part, they correct minor errors and clarify the intention of the legislation in cases of doubt. This package of regulations marks a step along the way of improving the CSA. We all know the difficulty that the CSA has is particularly marked in obtaining maintenance from self-employed non-resident parents. Regulation 6 introduces provisions which self-employed parents should find helpful, enabling them to provide the figures which they use for self-assessment of their earnings for tax purposes, for use in calculating maintenance. Only where they are unable to provide them, for example, if the business is a new one, will the agency have to continue the old cumbersome arrangements."
"2A. – (1) Subject to paragraphs 2B, 2C, 4 and 5A "earnings" in the case of employment as a self-employed earner shall have the meaning given by the following provisions of this paragraph.
(2) "Earnings" means the total taxable profits from self-employment of that earner as submitted to the Inland Revenue, less the following amounts –
(a) any income tax relating to the taxable profits from the self-employment determined in accordance with sub-paragraph (3);
(b) any National Insurance contributions relating to the taxable profits …
(c) one-half of any premium paid in respect of a retirement annuity contract …
(3) For the purposes of sub-paragraph (2)(a) the income tax to be deducted from the total taxable profits shall be determined in accordance with the following provisions –
(a) subject to head (d), an amount of earnings equivalent to any personal allowance … shall be disregarded;
(b) subject to head (c), an amount equivalent to income tax shall be calculated in relation to the earnings remaining …
2B – (1) Where –
(a) a self-employed earner cannot provide the Secretary of State with the total taxable profit figure from self-employment for the period concerned as submitted to the Inland Revenue, but can provide a copy of his tax calculation notice; or
(b) the Secretary of State becomes aware that the total taxable profit figure from the self-employment submitted by the self-employed earner has been revised by the Inland Revenue,
the earnings of that earner shall be calculated by reference to the income from employment as a self-employed earner as set out in the tax calculation notice … [or] by reference to the revised notice.
(2) In this paragraph and elsewhere in this Schedule –
"submitted to" means submitted to the Inland Revenue in accordance with their requirements by or on behalf of the self-employed earner; and
a "tax calculation notice" means a document issued by the Inland Revenue containing information as to the income of a self-employed earner;
a "revision of figures" means the revision of the figures relating to the total taxable profit of a self-employed earner following an enquiry under section 9A of the Taxes Management Act 1970 or otherwise by the Inland Revenue.
2C – Where the Secretary of State accepts that it is not reasonably practicable for the self-employed earner to provide information relating to his total taxable profits from self-employment in the form submitted to, or (where paragraph 2B applies) as issued or revised by, the Inland Revenue, "earnings" in relation to that earner shall have the meaning given by paragraph 3 of this Schedule."
"(1) Subject to sub-paragraph (2) of this paragraph, the earnings of a self-employed earner may be determined in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 2A only where the total taxable profits concerned relate to a period of not less than 6, and not more than 15 months, which terminated not more than 24 months prior to the relevant week;
(2) Where there is more than one total taxable profit figure which would satisfy the conditions set out in sub-paragraph (1), the earnings calculation shall be based upon the figure pertaining to the latest such period.
(3) Where, in the opinion of the child support officer, information as to the total taxable profits of the self-employed earner which would satisfy the criteria set out in sub-paragraphs (1) and (2) of this paragraph does not accurately reflect the normal weekly earnings of the self-employed earner, the earnings of that earner can be calculated by reference to the provisions of paragraphs 3 and 5 of this Schedule."
The tax background.
"(1) In computing for the purposes of income tax a person's income for any period of account there shall be made all such deductions and additions as are required to give effect to the provisions of Parts I to VI and this Part which relate to allowances and charges in respect of capital expenditure; and sub-section (2) below and section 141 have effect as respects allowances and charges which fall to be made under those provisions as they apply for the purposes of income tax.
(2) Allowances and charges which fall to be made for any period of account in taxing a trade under the provisions of Parts I to VI and this Part as they apply for the purposes of income tax shall be given effect by treating the amount of any allowance as a trading expense of the trade in that period, and by treating the amount on which any such charge is to be made as a trading receipt of the trade in that period.
(3) Any claim made by a person for an allowance falling to be made to him in taxing his trade shall be made in the return of income for income tax purposes, and s.42 of the Taxes and Management Act 1970 shall not apply to any such claim. …"
"If the qualifying activity of a person who is entitled or liable to an allowance or charge for a chargeable period is a trade, the allowance or charge is to be given effect in calculating the profits of the person's trade, by treating
(a) the allowance as an expense of the trade, and
(b) the charge as a receipt of the trade."
"(1) For the purpose of establishing the amounts in which a person is chargeable to income tax and capital gains tax for a year of assessment, [and the amount payable by him by way of income tax for that year,] he may be required by a notice given to him by an officer of the board –
(a) to make and deliver to the officer, on or before the day mentioned in sub-section (1A) below, a return containing such information as may reasonably be required in pursuance of the notice, and
(b) to deliver with the return such accounts, statements and documents, relating to information contained in the return, as may reasonably be so required. …
(2) Every return under this section shall include a declaration by the person making the return to the effect that the return is to the best of his knowledge correct and complete."
"This notice requires you by law to send me a tax return for the year from 6 April 2000 to 5 April 2001. Give details of all your income and capital gains …"
The Commissioner's decision.
"The alternative interpretations mean that either the whole lot can be deducted, or nothing is deductible at all: the figures … demonstrate how harshly this can bear on one side or the other, depending on which you pick."
"What is unfair to both sides at once, and of course to the children whose maintenance needs are at stake, is for the Secretary of State to have left his legislation ambiguous so that people are uncertain which is meant, and delays and disputes like this one arise which prevent everyone knowing where they stand, and hold up the payments for children's needs which of course arise on a continual weekly or monthly basis, not years after the event. It is I think fair to say it was quite unnecessary, if not unforgivable, for the 1999 changes to have been worded in the ambiguous way they were; and also unnecessary for the question to have to be an "all or nothing" one as it must be at present whichever view one adopts, the provisions for "departures" failing to provide more than a partial solution. I can only recommend that the Secretary of State should reconsider the intended effect of his regulations in this area as a matter of urgency, and attempt to come up with at least a clearer, and I would hope also a more just and equitable, solution in the interests of the children and everyone else involved."
"As already noted there is nothing in the wording of the provisions themselves or the Parliamentary material to suggest that the introduction of the new system in paragraph 2A of taking the child support figures from those already included in a tax return or shown in an Inland Revenue calculation, was intended as anything other than a means of saving trouble for all concerned, so as to arrive at substantially the same result as the previous "cumbersome" system. Nor is there anything to suggest the intention to introduce a substantive change of such potential magnitude as giving a full deduction under the paragraph 2A system for capital allowances, when such a deduction had never been allowed before and was still expressly excluded in cases where the paragraph 3 system still applied by virtue of paragraph 2C or 5A.
27. However imperfect the system of not allowing anything for capital expenditure or depreciation (it may I suppose have been thought, as in the original Income Tax Rules, that the ability to deduct the annual interest cost on money borrowed for this purpose was sufficient to arrive at the annual "Income profit"), it seems to me Mr Mostyn must be right in saying it would be absurd to impute to the Secretary of State the intention to superimpose on it, or Parliament to approve, something even more capricious whereby the amount to be counted as a parent's "income", and thus the maintenance to be provided for the needs of his children, should vary so widely and erratically according to where one happens to be directed to look for the figures of what ought substantially to amount to the same thing."
"the actual comparison required is between the level of income on which the current assessment is based, and that required to support the overall life-style of the person concerned."
My analysis.
"The reference to "taxable" is intended to import the statutory tax rules used for identifying and quantifying the amount of the NRP's [Non-Resident Parent's] income which is taxable: for example, what receipts are taxable, what items of expenditure are deductible …"
That is the tax lawyer saying the same thing as the man in the street.
"If the NRP and CSA are right then we have a system bizarre to the point of utter absurdity whereby a CSA official can decide by reference to more or less totally subjective considerations whether or not to allow enormous amounts of capital allowances to be deducted. There surely has to be the same system of principles applying whether this is a paragraph 2A or a paragraph 3 assessment or not. That this is so is a matter of basic logic."
Conclusion.
Lord Justice Wall :
"Whilst this case raises a point of some importance to absent parents who are self-employed, the Commissioner's judgment is both soundly reasoned and lucidly expressed. The conclusion he reached was open to him as a matter of interpretation, and avoids the absurdity and injustice which the rival contention produces.
The Commissioner's reference to Cooke v Secretary of State for Social Security [2002] 3 All ER 279 is apt, as are his comments on accountancy evidence. There is nothing in the Article 6 point. Leading counsel who is an expert in the field had a duty (which the Commissioner held – and the judgment demonstrates - he fully discharged) to bring to the Commissioner's attention all points that might assist the Appellant."
"Not all parents are treated in the same way under the scheme. Those who can afford it and reach agreement are enabled to opt out of it altogether, and are given access to the courts both for consent orders and for all subsequent questions of variation or enforcement. PWCs (parents with care) on benefit have none of these options and are required to use the system."
The Rt. Hon. Sir Martin Nourse :