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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> HM Revenue and Customs v Forde and McHugh Ltd [2012] EWCA Civ 692 (30 May 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/692.html Cite as: [2012] 3 All ER 1256, [2012] BTC 194, [2013] ICR 467, [2012] STC 1872, [2012] Pens LR 381, [2012] EWCA Civ 692, [2012] STI 1919 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (TAX AND CHANCERY CHAMBER)
Floyd J and Judge Avery Jones
[2011] UKUT 78 (TCC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
and
MR JUSTICE RYDER
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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FORDE AND McHUGH LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Mr Richard Bramwell QC, Ms Anne Redston and Mr Michael Sherry (instructed by Charterhouse (Accountants) LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 13 December 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rimer :
Introduction
The facts leading up to the execution of the Scheme Trust Deed
' on retirement, leaving service or death only to the extent that contributions are paid into the Trust explicitly for your benefit. Your normal retirement age under the Trust is presently 60, but [FML], with your consent may amend this normal retirement age from time to time. The initial contribution being made to the Trust for your benefit is £1,000. This is a taxable benefit in-kind, and the Inland Revenue will raise a tax assessment on you in respect of this contribution. You will be informed when any further contributions are made. Please could you complete, sign and return the enclosed acknowledgment'.
'It had also been pointed out [by Charterhouse] that, unlike approved pension schemes, contributions made by the company are taxable on the members as benefits-in-kind and may also be subject to National Insurance Contributions. It was understood that the position was currently being reviewed by the Contributions Agency and Inland Revenue. [Charterhouse] also advised that they had received advice from tax counsel that no liability to National Insurance arises. It was noted that the position may change in the forthcoming Budget.' (Emphasis supplied)
The Scheme Trust Deed
'4.4 The Accumulated Funds of all Members are held in the Trust Fund as a common trust fund out of which all the Benefits of the Scheme are to be provided, so no Beneficiary is entitled to any specific assets held by the Trustees or the income or gains from any specific assets. Any allocation of assets or investments to a Member's Accumulated Fund will be made for Benefit calculation purposes only unless the Trustees decide otherwise.
4.5 Income arising during the Trust Period [an 80-year perpetuity period] may be accumulated by the Trustees by their investing and otherwise applying it and its resulting income in any applications or investments authorised by these Rules or by law. The Trustees shall hold such accumulations as an accretion to the capital of the Trust Fund'.
National Insurance Contributions
'(2) For the purposes of this Part of this Act and of Parts II to V below other than those of Schedule 8
(a) the amount of a person's earnings for any period; or
(b) the amount of his earnings to be treated as comprised in any payment made to him or for his benefit,
shall be calculated or estimated in such manner and on such basis as may be prescribed by regulations made by the Treasury with the concurrence of the Secretary of State.
(2A) Regulations made for the purposes of subsection (2) above may prescribe that, where a payment is made or a benefit provided to or for the benefit of two or more earners, a proportion (determined in such manner as may be prescribed) of the amount of the payment or benefit shall be attributed to each earner.
(3) Regulations made for the purposes of subsection (2) above may prescribe that payments of a particular class or description made or falling to be made to or by a person shall, to such extent as may be prescribed, be disregarded or, as the case may be, be deducted from the amount of that person's earnings. '.
'(6) Regulations may make provision for the purposes of this Part
(a) for treating any amount on which an employed earner is chargeable to income tax under Schedule E as remuneration derived from the earner's employment; and
(b) for treating any amount which in accordance with regulations under paragraph (a) above constitutes remuneration as an amount of remuneration paid, at such time as may be determined in accordance with the regulations, to or for the benefit of the earner in respect of his employment. '.
'(1) Where in any tax week earnings are paid to or for the benefit of an earner over the age of 16 in respect of any one employment of his which is employed earner's employment
(a) a primary Class 1 contribution shall be payable in accordance with this section and section 8 below if the amount exceeds the current primary threshold (or the prescribed equivalent); and
(b) a secondary Class 1 contribution shall be payable in accordance with this section and section 9 below if the amount paid exceeds the current secondary threshold (or the prescribed equivalent).
(4) The primary and secondary Class 1 contributions referred to in subsection (1) above are payable as follows
(a) the primary contribution shall be the liability of the earner; and
(b) the secondary contribution shall be the liability of the secondary contributor '. (Emphasis supplied)
The liability said by HMRC to arise in this case is a secondary contribution payable under section 6(1)(b) by FML. The key phrase is the emphasised one: in particular, were the contributions that FML paid to the scheme 'earnings'?
(1) For the purposes of this Act, the "secondary contributor" in relation to any payment of earnings to or for the benefit of an employed earner, is
(a) in the case of an earner employed under a contract of service, his employer; '.
'For the purposes of determining the amount of earnings-related contributions, the amount of a person's earnings from employed earner's employment shall be calculated on the basis of his gross earnings from the employment or employments in question.
This is subject to the provisions of Schedule 2 (calculation of earnings for the purposes of earnings-related contributions in particular cases) and Schedule 3 (payments to be disregarded in the calculation of earnings for the purposes of earnings-related contributions).'
'13-(1) If, pursuant to a retirement benefits scheme, a payment is made with a view to providing any benefits under such a scheme in relation to more than one person, the amount of earnings which is comprised in that payment shall be calculated or estimated on the basis set out in whichever of subparagraphs (2) or (3) applies.
(2) If the separate benefits to be provided to each of the people referred to in sub-paragraph (1) are known at the time when the payment is made, the basis is that of the separate payments which would have had to have been paid to secure the benefits.
(3) In any other case, the amount of the payment shall be apportioned equally between all the persons in respect of whose earnings the payment is to be taken into account.'
'1. A payment in kind, or by way of the provision of services, board and lodging or other facilities is to be disregarded in the calculation of earnings.
This is subject to the [sic] paragraph 2 and also to any provision about a payment in kind of a particular description or in particular circumstances in any other Part of this Schedule.'
The decision of the Upper Tribunal
The appeal
' a sum receivable by way of salary or wages is not the less salary or wages taxable because for some reason or another the person who receives it has not got the full right to apply it just as he likes. The fact that income which is income, but which has even by operation of some statute to be devoted compulsorily to some purpose or another, does not prevent it being income.'
His analysis of the facts was that the disputed sum must be taken as having been added to the taxpayer's salary, and so taxable, and that it was not the less so added because there was a binding agreement between the taxpayer and the Governors that the Governors should then apply it in a particular way (see page 46). The case was therefore an application of the obvious principle that salary to which an employee is entitled does not cease to be his taxable income merely because he has committed himself to applying it in a particular way such that he is prevented from its immediate, or indeed any, enjoyment. The difficulty in the case was not the identification of the principle so much as the ascertainment of the true nature of the arrangements that had been made.
' this is an emolument which accrued and was payable not in each successive year, but in the sixth year, and was to be paid when it was handed over in 1927 and not before. It is quite true that a proportion of this amount might have been paid ex gratia by the employers if death had supervened, or if under Clause 9 he had been deemed unfit to go on with his service. Taking the normal course, he was not entitled to anything until the lapse of six years, and his right could have been entirely defeated by the events which are tabled in (A), (B) and (C) of Clause 10 of the agreement It seems to me that the facts in this case stand apart from that principle [that of Stretton's case], and that under these circumstances there could not be said to have accrued to this employee a vested interest in these successive sums placed to his credit, but only that he had a chance of being paid a sum at the end of six years if all went well. That chance has now supervened, and he has got it by reason of the fact of his employment, or by reason of his exercising an employment of profit within Schedule E.'
' no more than an illustration of a well-established principle that for the purposes of taxation of a man's income it matters not what the man has thought fit to do in the way of spending that income or investing it.'
The case under appeal was, however, quite different. What had happened in it was that (at 640):
'The Company agreed to pay to the employee during his service his salary at the rate of £425 per annum, but agreed "as an additional inducement to the Employee more effectively to perform his duties and assist in promoting and advancing the interests of the Company" that the Company would in the year 1927 pay him the sum of £1,639. That being so, it seems to me clear that the £1,639, though in truth an emolument of the office held by Mr Roberts, was an emolument for the year in respect of the year 1927, and cannot be treated as made up of a series of emoluments for the preceding years.'
'The true nature of the agreement was that he was to be entitled in the events, and only in the events mentioned in Clause 8 of the agreement, to the investments made by the Company out of the net profits of the Company as provided in Clause 6. Next it is to be observed that Mr Roberts had only a conditional right, that is to say, a right as given to him conditionally upon the events mentioned in Clause 8 of the agreement being complied with, to receive the investments which might be made on his behalf at times and in the manner therein mentioned. If all those circumstances are taken into consideration I think that it results in this, that the benefits which he might conditionally become entitled to under the agreement are not in a true sense part of the salary in the wide sense chargeable under Schedule E of the Income Tax Act.'
'(1) Subject to the provisions of this Chapter, where, pursuant to a retirement benefits scheme, the employer in any year of assessment pays a sum with a view to the provision of any relevant benefits for any employee of that employer, then (whether or not the accrual of the benefits is dependent on any contingency)
(a) the sum paid, if (disregarding section 148) it is not otherwise chargeable to income tax as income of the employee, shall be deemed for all purposes of the Income Tax Acts to be income of that employee for that year of assessment and assessable to tax under Schedule E;
(4) Where the employer pays any sum as mentioned in subsection (1) above in relation to more than one employee, the sum so paid shall, for the purpose of that subsection, be apportioned among those employees by reference to the separate sums which would have had to be paid to secure the separate benefits to be provided for them respectively, and the part of the sum apportioned to each of them shall be deemed for that purpose to have been paid separately in relation to that one of them. '. (Emphases supplied)
' an enhancement of an asset in circumstances such as arise in these cases should not be viewed in the same way. The payment of the gilts to the insurers was intended to and did have the effect of providing for the employee the means of obtaining money from an asset he already held. And the value of the gilts represented (subject to negligible fluctuations in value) the amount he would get. Accordingly, the payment can without transgressing the general principle properly be regarded as a payment of earnings for the benefit of the employee. This approach also coincides with the reality of the situation since there was no benefit to anyone other than the employee from the payment in question.'
'Since tax and national insurance contributions are payable on what the employee receives it would be surprising if, absent special provisions to deal with individual circumstances, the approach should differ. Thus it is, in my judgment, legitimate to seek guidance from the tax cases in identifying what the earner has got by way of remuneration. That may be the same as what the employer has paid, but not necessarily where payments in kind are concerned.'
' it must be based on a principle which applies in all circumstances. It seems to me that the principle is to be found in what the employee receives whether directly or indirectly as earnings. If it is a payment in kind, it will be disregarded unless specifically brought into account.'
'In relation to graduated contributions references in this Act to remuneration shall be taken to include, and include only, any emoluments assessable to income tax under Schedule E (other than pensions), being emoluments from which tax under that Schedule is deductible, but shall apply to a payment of any such remuneration, whether or not tax in fact falls to be deducted from that payment'.
As respects flat rate payments, the definition of 'earnings' in the 1946 Act continued to apply.
Conclusion
Mr Justice Ryder :
Lady Justice Arden :
"In relation to graduated contributions, references in this Act to remuneration shall be taken to include, and to include only, any emoluments assessable to income tax under Schedule E (other than pensions), being emoluments from which tax under that Schedule is deductible, but shall apply to a payment of any such remuneration whether or not tax in fact falls to be deducted from that payment."
"(1) Where
(a) for any tax year an earner is chargeable to income tax under Schedule E on an amount which for the purposes of the Income Tax Acts is or falls to be treated as an emolument received by him from any employment ("the relevant employment"),
(b) the relevant employment is both employed earner's employment, and employment to which Chapter II of Part V of the 1988 Act (employment of a director or with annual emoluments of more than £8,500), applies, and
(c) the whole or a part of the emolument falls, for the purposes of Class 1 contributions, to be left out of account in the computation of the earnings paid to or for the benefit of the earner,
a Class 1A contribution shall be payable for that tax year, in accordance with this section, in respect of that earner and so much of the emolument as falls to be so left out of account."