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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Lingfield Park (1991) Ltd v Shove [2004] EWCA Civ 391 (31 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/391.html Cite as: [2004] STC 805, [2004] EWCA Civ 391 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION
MR JUSTICE HART
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MUMMERY
and
LORD JUSTICE SCOTT BAKER
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LINGFIELD PARK (1991) LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SHOVE |
Respondent |
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MR TIMOTHY BRENNAN QC (instructed by the Solicitor of Inland Revenue) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 15th March 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mummery :
Capital Allowances: General
"(1) Subject to the provisions of this Part, where-
(a) a person carrying on a trade has incurred capital expenditure on the provision of machinery or plant wholly or exclusively for the purposes of the trade, and
(b) in consequence of his incurring that expenditure, the machinery or plant belongs or has belonged to him,
allowances and charges shall be made to and on him in accordance with the following provisions of this section."
" It naturally happens that as case follows case, and one extension leads to another, the meaning of the word gradually diverges from its natural or dictionary meaning. This is certainly true of "plant." No ordinary man, literate or semi-literate, would think that a horse, a swimming pool, moveable partitions, or even a dry dock was plant-yet each of these has been held to be so: so why not such equally improbable items as murals, or tapestries, or chandeliers?"
"There is no universal formula which can solve these puzzles. In the end each case must be resolved, in my opinion, by considering carefully the nature of the particular trade being carried on, and the relation of the expenditure to the promotion of the trade. I do not think that the court should shrink, as a backstop, from asking whether it can really be supposed that Parliament desired to encourage a particular expenditure out of, in effect, taxpayers' money, and perhaps ultimately, in extreme cases, to say that this is too much to stomach."
The Proceedings
" …… whether on the facts found or admitted and on the proper construction of s24 Capital Allowances Act 1990 we were entitled to conclude that the All-Weather Track at Lingfield Park is plant for the purposes of s 24 Capital Allowances Act 1990 during the accounting period to 31st December 1991."
"16. From their description of the mode of construction of the AWT and its (obvious) purpose in the respondent's business, I cannot see how any other conclusion was open to the commissioners than that it functioned as part of the premises of that business. This does not appear to me to be a question of fact and degree on which the court is bound by their findings. It is a question of the meaning of the premises test as elaborated by the authorities. In my judgment the commissioners were wrong and it is my duty so to rule."
The Question of Law for this Court
" It is agreed that the question for this Court, as it was for the Judge, is whether the facts found by the Commissioners are such that no person acting judicially and properly instructed as to the relevant law could have come to the decision to which the Commissioners came or, if you prefer it in the other form, whether their decision is contradicted by the true and only reasonable conclusion from the facts found."
" Few subjects in revenue law can have engaged so much judicial attention over the years as plant, especially in recent years, perhaps because of the significant benefits accruing to traders from the new system of allowances and charges in respect of machinery and plant which was introduced by the 1971 Act….Many of the authorities demonstrate the difficulties encountered by the Courts when seeking to apply principles laid down in earlier decisions to facts not contemplated at the time.
That said, I do not doubt that the more recent authorities have stated the principles with sufficient force and clarity to render any lengthy examination of the law unnecessary for a decision in this case. The essential question here is whether the structure which is the taxpayer's planteria can reasonably be called apparatus with which their trade is carried on as opposed to premises in which it is carried on, it being established that a large structure used for the purposes of the trade may be capable of falling into the former category, see e.g. Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Barclay Curle & Co Ltd [1969] 1 WLR 675 (dry dock used in trade of ship builders, ship repairers and marine engineers)."
"It is proper to consider the function of the item in dispute. But the question is what does it function as? If it functions as part of the premises it is not plant." (See also Lloyd LJ at p97).
"It is hard to see how land, as distinct from a structure could ever be apparatus functioning as plant."
The Facts
" 8.9 …the AWT had retained a separate identity from the grass racetrack and buildings at Lingfield Park, that it functioned as plant and not as part of the premises and they were therefore satisfied that the all-weather track constituted plant for the purposes of the 1990 Act."
Lingfield's Submissions
(1) The Commissioners have correctly applied the premises test. The AWT was not premises and did not become such by being fixed to the ground or by being substantial in extent or by discharging the additional function of providing a place where the trade of horse racing was carried on: it was neither land in its natural state, in contrast to the grass track, nor did it function as premises normally do, as in the provision of shelter or security or as a setting for the trade. The AWT was fundamentally different in character from the grass track, which it was agreed not capable of being plant, or from the buildings, like the grandstand. It was more like the swimming pool, a structure sunk into the ground which was held to be plant. As that case and the dry dock cases show it is possible, though it may be rare, for the same item to be a physical part of premises and yet to function as plant.
(2) The AWT retained a separate identity from the land, having regard to the way it was constructed and maintained. It was an artificial manufactured item, with a limited life, placed on suitably prepared land. Its separateness and its lack of permanence was demonstrated by the fact that the "equitrack" surface had been removed and disposed of separately from the land.
(3) Neither the mode of construction nor its purpose made the AWT part of the premises. It functioned as apparatus, and not as premises, like the swimming pool, even though it involved excavation and building works. It was the means by which the trade of Lingfield was carried on throughout the year.
(4) The AWT differed significantly from those parts of Lingfield's site, which did function as premises, such as the spectator stands.
Conclusion
" For my part I am quite unable to see how, without doing violence to the way in which language is used, one can describe the AWT as being, or functioning, otherwise than as part of the premises on which the business was conducted. It was no doubt separately identifiable from other parts of the premises both as a matter of visual inspection and having regard to the way in which it had been constructed and maintained. I cannot, however, see that this made it lose its character as part of the premises for the purposes of the premises test."
Lord Justice Scott Baker:
Lord Justice Potter