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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Test Claimants In the Loss Relief Group Litigation v Inland Revenue [2004] EWCA Civ 680 (28 May 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/680.html Cite as: [2005] WLR 52, [2004] 3 All ER 957, [2005] 1 WLR 52, [2004] EWCA Civ 680 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
Park J.
HC 02C03865
London. WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
Between:
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THE TEST CLAIMANTS IN THE LOSS RELIEF GROUP LITIGATION |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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COMMISSIONERS OF INLAND REVENUE |
Respondent |
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Mr. Richard Plender Q.C. and Mr. David Ewart (instructed by the Solicitor of Inland Revenue) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 20 May 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Peter Gibson:
"402(2) Group relief shall be available where the surrendering company and the claimant company are both members of the same group.
413(3) For the purposes of this Chapter-
(a) two companies shall be deemed to be members of a group of companies if one is the subsidiary of the other or both are 75% subsidiaries of a third company;
...
413(5) References in this Chapter to a company apply only to bodies corporate resident in the United Kingdom; and in determining for the purposes of this Chapter whether one company is a 75% subsidiary of another, the other company shall be treated as not being the owner –
...
(c) of any share capital which it owns directly or indirectly in a body corporate not resident in the United Kingdom. "
For accounting periods ending after 31 March 2000 the following conditions, in s. 402 (3A) and (3B), apply:
"402(3A) Group relief is not available unless the following condition is satisfied in the case of both the surrendering company and the claimant company.
(3B) The condition is that the company is resident in the United Kingdom or is a non-resident company carrying on a trade in the United Kingdom through a branch or agency."
(i) Autologic: there was an appeal pending before the
Commissioners.
(ii) Future Network: there was a claim made to the Inspector which had been refused although not yet the subject of an appeal.
(iii) BT: claims had been made to the Inspector but had not yet been determined.
(iv) Caterpillar: a claim had been made to the Inspector but had subsequently been withdrawn.
(v) Heinz: no claim had been made to the Inspector, but time had not expired for making claims for some accounting periods.
(vi) BNP Paribas: no claim had yet been made to the Inspector and the statutory time limit for making a claim had expired.
"(i) For the profits of the UK profit-making company to be relieved by the losses of a non-UK resident company.
(ii) Because of the clear legislative requirement for all the relevant companies to be resident in the UK basic group relief was regarded in every case as not available. In many cases the profit-making companies used other reliefs (e.g. capital allowances or surplus ACT) which they would not have used had basic group relief been available. In these cases the profit-making companies claim restitution of the other reliefs or, in the alternative, compensation for their use.
(iii) In many cases other UK members of the group surrendered their own reliefs to the UK profit-making company; and those companies are reclaiming the reliefs.
(iv) In all of the cases the companies which would have surrendered losses, if the group relief rules were not confined to UK resident companies, may have been paid for allowing their losses to be set-off against the profit-making companies' profits, and they seek compensation for the loss of these payments."
"Possibly the correct view is that there is an absolute exclusion of the High Court's jurisdiction only when the proceedings seek relief which is more or less co-extensive with adjudicating on an existing open assessment; but that the more closely the High Court proceedings approximate to that in their substantial effect, the more ready the High Court will be, as a matter of discretion, to decline jurisdiction. "
Park 1. said that the category (i) claims where there had been an assessment were precisely co-extensive with adjudicating on an existing open assessment and, where there was no existing open assessment, relief of the same nature was claimed. He was not impressed by the claimants' arguments that the more convenient course for the parties was for him to accept jurisdiction. He said that the statutory procedure should be followed and it would be wrong to subvert and undermine the jurisdiction of the Commissioners by allowing cases between taxpayer and the Revenue on an issue of tax law to be commenced in the High Court. Accordingly he struck out two paragraphs of the claimants' pleadings relating to relief sought in respect of the category (i) claims. If I might say so, the attitude adopted by the judge was that which would perhaps appeal to most lawyers experienced in tax matters if Community law considerations could be left out of account.
(1) By reason of Hoechst the judge should have found that the High Court not only had jurisdiction but was required to hear the category (i) claims.
(2) The judge erred in not deciding whether he had jurisdiction; he should have found on the authorities that he had jurisdiction and should have exercised it.
(3) The judge erred in failing to appreciate or give adequate consideration to the practical difficulties in requiring the category (i) claims to be severed from all the other claims and consigned to the Commissioners; those difficulties should have led the judge to exercise jurisdiction by hearing all the claims in the High Court.
Hoechst
"Is a Member State entitled to plead in answer to such a claim for restitution, tax credit or damages, that the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover, or that the plaintiffs' claim should be reduced, on the grounds that, despite the terms of the national Statute which prevented them from doing so as a matter of national law they ought to have made a group income election, or claimed a tax credit and have appealed to the Commissioners and, if necessary, the courts against the decision of the inspector of taxes refusing the election or claim, relying upon the primacy and direct effect of the provisions of Community law?"
"58. Since I consider that the Court should rule that the denial of the option to make a group income election to subsidiaries whose parent companies were resident in other Member States constituted unlawful discrimination contrary to Article [43] of the EC Treaty, and that the mere fact that the alleged resulting loss suffered by such subsidiaries concerned the time value of the use of the monies paid by way of ACT does not preclude their claim, it is necessary to consider briefly whether the alleged omission of the plaintiffs, over an extended period of time, to challenge that denial, on the basis of the relevant national statutory appeal mechanism, or, indeed, by way of an earlier direct judicial review application than that actually brought in the main proceedings, may be invoked by the defendant Member State to defeat or reduce the damages sought subsequently by them in a claim based on its incompatibility with Community law. It is true that it has been accepted by the Court that a failure to show 'reasonable diligence' in order to avoid loss or damage or to reduce its extent and particularly to avail 'in time of all the legal remedies available', may, if similar rules would be applied in purely national-law cases, be taken into account by the national court to reduce, and perhaps in extreme cases, eliminate Member State liability. In my opinion, it should not be permissible, save in the most extreme of cases, for a Member State, whose legislation created a difference in treatment to the detriment of non-residents that admitted of no exceptions and which would have required them, on pain of penalties, to continue paying the tax in question even if its compatibility with Community law had been called into question, to rely upon a taxpayer's failure to use a statutory remedy - one which, moreover, was not, in its own terms, applicable to it - for the purpose of making such a Community-law claim, or to rely upon the direct effect and supremacy of Article [43] of the EC Treaty, as an excuse for seeking to limit a subsequent claim for damages based on the incompatibility of that legislation with Community law.
59. This conclusion reflects the important principle that a Member State must not be allowed to profit from its own wrong. It may not, therefore, insist on the application of its rules against taxpayers and then, when those rules are found to be contrary to Community law, deny an obligation to make reparation for the loss it caused on the basis that those rules were not immediately challenged. In my view, in cases such as the present case, where claimants are essentially faced with an unambiguous national legislative rule, on the one hand, and the possible right to oppose the application against them of that rule on the basis of Community law, on the other hand, and where neither the rule in question nor any similar rule of another Member State has previously been considered by this Court, a delay on the part of the claimant in challenging the national rule in question should only be taken into account by the competent national court when considering the possible limits affecting the claim before it flowing from national limitation periods or from other comparable rules regarding laches that would also apply to similar claims based purely on national law."
"103. Next, it is not disputed that in the cases in the main proceedings the tax legislation of the United Kingdom clearly denied resident subsidiaries of non-resident parent companies the benefit of the group income election, with the result that the plaintiffs cannot be faulted for failure to indicate their intention to apply to make a group income election. According to the orders for reference, it is not disputed that, had the plaintiffs applied for that taxation regime, their application would have been refused by the Inspector of Taxes because the parent companies were not resident in the United Kingdom.
104. Finally, the orders for reference make it clear that an appeal against such a refusal by the tax authorities could have been brought before the Special or General Commissioners and then, if necessary, before the High Court. According to the national court, before judgment could be given in such an appeal, the subsidiaries would still have had to pay ACT in respect of all the dividends which they had paid out and, furthermore, if the appeal had succeeded, they would not have obtained reimbursement of the ACT, since no such right to reimbursement exists under English law. If the subsidiaries had chosen not to pay ACT in respect of dividends paid before the determination of their appeals, they would nevertheless have been assessed to ACT, would have had to pay interest on those sums and would have laid themselves open to statutory penalties if they had been judged to have acted negligently and without reasonable cause.
105. It therefore appears that, in the cases in the main proceedings, the United Kingdom Government is blaming the plaintiffs for lack of diligence and for not availing themselves earlier of legal remedies other than those which they took to challenge the compatibility with Community law of the national provisions denying a tax advantage to subsidiaries of non-resident parent companies. It is thus criticising the plaintiffs for complying with national legislation and for paying ACT without applying for the group income election regime or using the available legal remedies to challenge the refusal with which the tax authorities would inevitably have met their application.
106. The exercise of rights conferred on private persons by directly applicable provisions of Community law would, however, be rendered impossible or excessively difficult if their claims for restitution or compensation based on Community law were rejected or reduced solely because the persons concerned had not applied for a tax advantage which national law denied them, with a view to challenging the refusal of the tax authorities by means of the legal remedies provided for that purpose, invoking the primacy and direct effect of Community law.
107. The answer to the fifth question must therefore be that it is contrary to Community law for a national court to refuse or reduce a claim brought before it by a resident subsidiary and its non-resident parent company for reimbursement or reparation of the financial loss which they have suffered as a consequence of the advance payment of corporation tax by the subsidiary, on the sale ground that they did not apply to the tax authorities in order to benefit from the taxation regime which would have exempted the subsidiary from making payments in advance and that they therefore did not make use of the legal remedies available to them to challenge the refusals of the tax authorities, by invoking the primacy and direct effect of the provisions of Community law, where upon any view national law denied resident subsidiaries and their non-resident parent companies the benefit of that taxation regime."
"In the absence of Community rules on the restitution of national charges that have been improperly levied, it is for the domestic legal system of each Member State to designate the courts and tribunals having jurisdiction and to lay down the detailed procedural rules governing actions for safeguarding rights which individuals derive from Community law, provided, first, that such rules are not less favourable than those governing similar domestic actions (principle of equivalence) and, second, that they do not render practically impossible or excessively difficult the exercise of rights conferred by Community law (principle of effectiveness)."
Jurisdiction as a matter of English law
Conclusion
Lord Justice Longmore: