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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Prizedome Ltd & Anor v HM Revenue & Customs [2009] EWCA Civ 177 (12 March 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/177.html Cite as: [2009] STI 689, [2009] EWCA Civ 177, [2009] STC 980, [2009] BTC 114 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
MR JUSTICE BLACKBURNE
CH/2007/APP/0412
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
and
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
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(1)PRIZEDOME LIMITED (2) LIMITGOOD LIMITED |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS OF HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR MALCOLM GAMMIE QC and MR DAVID EWART QC (instructed by the Solicitor to HM Revenue & Customs) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 9th & 10th December 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mummery :
Background and issues
"The essence of the new approach was to give the statutory provision a purposive construction in order to determine the nature of the transaction to which it was intended to apply and then to decide whether the actual transaction (which might involve considering the overall effect of a number of elements intended to operate together) answered to the statutory description. Of course this does not mean that the courts have to put their reasoning in the straitjacket of first construing the statute in the abstract and then looking at the facts. It might be more convenient to analyse the facts and then ask whether they satisfy the requirements of the statute. But however one approaches the matter, the question always is whether the relevant provision of the statute, upon its true construction, applies to the facts as found. As Lord Nicholls said in MacNiven v. Westmoreland Investments Ltd [2003] 1 AC 311,320, para 8: "The paramount question always is one of interpretation of the particular statutory provision and its application to the facts of the case." "
Facts and law
SCHEDULE 7A
RESTRICTION ON SET-OFF OF PRE-ENTRY LOSSES
Application and construction of Schedule
"1 (1) This Schedule shall have effect, in the case of a company which is or has been a member of a group of companies ("the relevant group"), in relation to any pre-entry losses of that company.
(2) In this Schedule "pre-entry loss", in relation to any company, means-
(a) any allowable loss that accrued to that company at a time before it became a member of the relevant group; or
(b) the pre-entry proportion of any allowable loss accruing to that company on the disposal of any pre-entry asset.
……..
[(3), (4) and (5) relate to "pre-entry assets"]
(6) Subject to so much of sub-paragraph (6) of paragraph 9 below as requires groups of companies to be treated as separate groups for the purposes of that paragraph, if-
(a) the principal company of a group of companies ("the first group") has at any time become a member of another group ("the second group") so that the two groups are treated as the same by virtue of subsection (10) of section 170, and
(b) the second group, together in pursuance of that subsection with the first group, is the relevant group,
then, except where subparagraph (7) below applies, the members of the first group shall be treated for the purposes of this Schedule as having become members of the relevant group at that time and not by virtue of that subsection at the times when they became members of the first group".
……..
Identification of "the relevant group" and application of Schedule to every connected group
9. (1) This paragraph shall apply where there is more than one group of companies which would be the relevant group in relation to any company.
(2) Where any loss has accrued on the disposal by any company of any asset, this Schedule shall not apply by reference to any group of companies in relation to any loss accruing on that disposal unless-
(a) that group is a group in relation to which that loss is a pre-entry loss by virtue of paragraph 1(2)(a) above or, if there is more than one such group, the one of which that company most recently became a member;
…………….
(6) Notwithstanding that the principal company of one group ("the first group") has become a member of another group ("the second group"), those two groups shall not by virtue of section 170(10) be treated in relation to any company that is or has become a member of the second group ("the relevant company") as the same group for the purposes of this paragraph if-
(a) the time at which the relevant company became a member of the first group is a time in the same accounting period as that in which the principal company of the first group became a member of the second group ; or
(b) the principal company of the first group was under the control, immediately before it became a member of the second group, of a company which at that time was already a member of the second group."
Section 170
Interpretation of sections 171 to 181
"(10) For the purposes of this section and sections 171 to 181, a group remains the same group so long as the same company remains the principal company of the group, and if at any time the principal company of a group becomes a member of another group, the first group and the other group shall be regarded as the same and the question whether or not a company has ceased to be a member of a group shall be determined accordingly."
The appeal
Application of Schedule 7A
Construction of paragraph 1(6)(b)
"63. What then are the losses to which [paragraph 1(6)] is directed? In my judgment they are losses which are pre-entry in relation to the second group; they are not losses which are pre-entry to the first group. I reach that conclusion because, if it were the latter, there would be no need to disapply the operation of section 170(10); paragraph 1(6) would add nothing to the scheme of the Schedule. It is precisely because, as regards losses which have accrued to members of the group while members of that group, there is a need if the aim of the Schedule–to subject pre-entry losses to restrictions on set off-is to be achieved, to disapply section 170(10) that in my judgment, paragraph 1(6) was enacted. So regarded it puts losses accruing to companies in a group which is subsequently taken over by another group on the same footing as losses accruing to a single company which is subsequently taken over by a group. That being, as I see it, the purpose of the provision I see no reason, unless compelled by the words to do so, to construe it as having an effect which goes beyond that purpose. I consider that the purpose can be achieved-and the surprising results which I have described in paragraph 60 above-by construing the reference to "the relevant group" in subparagraph (b) as confined to losses of the acquired (the first) group which are not pre-entry losses in relation to that group immediately before its acquisition by the acquiring (second) group."
Result
Lord Justice Dyson:
Lord Justice Jacob: