![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Vehicle Control Services Ltd v HM Revenue & Customs [2013] EWCA Civ 186 (13 March 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/186.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 186, [2013] WLR(D) 105 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [View ICLR summary: [2013] WLR(D) 105] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (TAX AND CHANCERY CHAMBER)
THE UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE
TC200915554
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LORD JUSTICE TREACY
____________________
VEHICLE CONTROL SERVICES LIMITED |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Sarabjit Singh (instructed by The Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 4 March 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
The issue
The facts
i) To erect and maintain warning signs at the car park indicating that the car park is private property for the use of valid permit holders only, and that vehicles not clearly displaying valid permits will be liable to parking enforcement procedures including the issue of a parking charge notice, vehicle immobilisation and towing away, and indicating the fees for release (Clause 3.1)ii) To supply the client with parking permits for issue to authorised vehicles at a cost of £2 per permit and £2.50 per book of 50 guest permits, and a permit instruction sheet giving details on how to complete and display the permits (Clauses 3.2 and 3.3)
"3.4 Inspect the Car Park at such Intervals as the Company in its discretion thinks necessary from time to time and take such action in respect of vehicles there found as outlined in 3.1 and 4.3 including the issue of parking charge notices, vehicle immobilisation and/or towing away as the Company shall think fit
i) Payment of a registration fee of £25 plus VAT;ii) Paying an annual fee for the warning signs;
iii) Ensuring "that all vehicles authorised to use the Car Park shall clearly display upon the windscreen a valid permit supplied by [VCS]" (clause 4.3).
"The Client request and authorise the Company to carry out its obligations hereunder and warrants to the Company its title and authority to do so."
"The permit permits the vehicle registered below to use the parking facilities within the zone/area designated but it does not guarantee that a space will be available. Please read carefully the terms and conditions of use listed below prior to parking the vehicle."
"Prior to a permit being issued a written order in all circumstances must be received by [VCS] from the Client or authorised agent."
"Any vehicle causing an obstruction or parked in an unauthorised parking bay and/or zone will render the permit void."
"Any breach of the former terms and conditions will result in the offending vehicle being issued with either a parking charge notice and/or the affixing of a wheel clamp and/or towing away and impounding. In such circumstances a charge will be levied prior to its release. No exceptions to this rule will be permitted."
The decision of the FTT
The decision of the Upper Tribunal
"[27] We conclude that in this case VCS did not have a contractual right to occupy or have possession with the effective control that is necessary if Dutton is to apply. The mere right of access afforded under the contract by the client to VCS did not give VCS any right to bring an action in trespass against the motorists who parked their vehicles in breach of the relevant restrictions.
[28] Even if it had been the case that VCS had rights of occupation or possession sufficient to found an action in trespass, it is clear from Dutton that there are limits on the application of such a remedy. The remedy must protect, but not exceed, the legal rights granted by the licence. In this case the limited rights afforded to VCS under the contract do not require protection from motorists who park their cars in breach of the relevant restrictions. Indeed, such behaviour is of the very essence of the arrangements between the client and VCS. We agree therefore with the conclusion of the First-tier Tribunal in this respect."
"[40] In our judgment that was an error of law. On the facts of this case we do not consider that any offer was made by VCS that was capable of forming the basis for a contract between it and the motorist. VCS was not in a position, by virtue of its limited licence, to make any offer of a right to park. The ability to offer such a right was not conferred by the contract with the client, either expressly or by virtue of the nature of the interest in the car park conferred on VCS. That interest did not amount to a licence to occupy, or give VCS any right to possession. It merely conferred a right of entry to perform VCS's obligations under the contract.
[41] The warning signs erected in the car park do not assist VCS in these circumstances. The reference in those signs to the fact that the motorist is entering into a contractual agreement cannot create a contract where there is no relevant offer from VCS that can be accepted."
"[48] The legal analysis is that VCS collects the various parking charges as agent for the client, which represents damages for trespass, or for breach of a contract between the landowner and the motorist. Such payments are outside the scope of VAT.
[49] By allowing VCS to collect and retain the charges, the client was giving consideration, or further consideration, to VCS for its parking control services under the contract. That was consideration for standard-rated supplies by VCS to the client."
"We have recently reconsidered that policy in the light of new legal advice and have concluded that, in the case of [Bristol City Council], the Tribunal's decision was founded as much upon the contractual relationship as the statutory regime. Therefore, we now accept that there is a difference between the situation where the contract under which parking is supplied allows for an extension of the original terms, for which additional consideration will be payable, and the situation where the driver is not permitted to extend the original terms and a penalty for breach of contract ensues if this in fact happens. Thus, where a car park operator makes an offer of parking under clear terms and conditions, setting punitive fines for their breach, the fines constitute penalties for breaching the contract, rather than additional consideration for using the facilities. Consequently, they are outside the scope of VAT. Since the same contractual relationships arise between drivers and local authority car park operators as arise between drivers and other car park operators, we have also concluded that the VAT treatment of excess charges will be the same for all car park operators."
The breach of contract issue
i) VCS had the right to determine (and alter) the parking charges;ii) VCS had the right to decide what kind of enforcement action to take;
iii) VCS had no obligation to account to the landowner which is a fundamental feature of agency;
iv) VCS was pursuing its own commercial objectives in taking enforcement action, whereas an agent is in a fiduciary relation with his principal.
i) The landowner does not in fact receive any money;ii) The landowner does not know how much money VCS has recovered;
iii) The landowner has no control over the amount of money that VCS recovers;
iv) The landowner has no right to know;
v) No money passes from the landowner to VCS which is attributable to parking charges.
The trespass issue
"I would hold that the court today has ample power to grant a remedy to a licensee which will protect but not exceed his legal rights granted by the licence. If, as here, that requires an order for possession, the spectre of history (which, in the true tradition of the common law, ought to be a friendly ghost) does not stand in the way….
In my judgment the true principle is that a licensee not in occupation may claim possession against a trespasser if that is a necessary remedy to vindicate and give effect to such rights of occupation as by contract with his licensor he enjoys. This is the same principle as allows a licensee who is in de facto possession to evict a trespasser. There is no respectable distinction, in law or logic, between the two situations. An estate owner may seek an order whether he is in possession or not. So, in my judgment, may a licensee, if other things are equal. In both cases, the plaintiff's remedy is strictly limited to what is required to make good his legal right. The principle applies although the licensee has no right to exclude the licensor himself. Elementarily he cannot exclude any occupier who, by contract or estate, has a claim to possession equal or superior to his own. Obviously, however, that will not avail a bare trespasser.
In this whole debate, as regards the law of remedies in the end I see no significance as a matter of principle in any distinction drawn between a plaintiff whose right to occupy the land in question arises from title and one whose right arises only from contract. In every case the question must be, what is the reach of the right, and whether it is shown that the defendant's acts violate its enjoyment. If they do, and (as here) an order for possession is the only practical remedy, the remedy should be granted. Otherwise the law is powerless to correct a proved or admitted wrongdoing; and that would be unjust and disreputable. The underlying principle is in the Latin maxim (for which I make no apology), "ubi jus, ibi sit remedium.""
i) The court has power to grant a remedy to a licensee which will protect but not exceed his legal rights granted by the licence; andii) In every case the question must be, what is the reach of the right, and whether it is shown that the defendant's acts violate its enjoyment.
"[22] Ordinarily growing crops do not become goods until they are severed from the land. Once they are so severed the owner of the crop can maintain an action for wrongful interference with the goods. The defendants' actions in uprooting the crop amounted to severance, and therefore an action for trespass to goods will lie. For practical purposes it makes little difference in this case whether the tort is trespass to land or goods, though in my opinion it should properly be regarded as trespass to land which affords Monsanto somewhat wider protection, for example in relation to a poisoning of the crop without uprooting.
[23] The arrangements between the farmer and Monsanto are governed by a standard form of agreement. It is unnecessary to set it out at length. The seed is the property of Monsanto; the drilling, spraying and co-ordination of the trial is done by Monsanto's contractor. More importantly it is provided that "the crop resulting from the tests are all the property of Monsanto". This is clearly sufficient to enable Monsanto to maintain the action for trespass both on sites which they do not own as well as those they do."
"The relevant causes of action relied on by Monsanto for summary judgment are trespass to land and to goods. The defendants deny that Monsanto was the owner of or was in possession of the relevant GM oilseed rape and other plants growing on licensed trial sites which do not belong to Monsanto. An action for trespass to land may, however, be brought by a person who is entitled under an agreement with the landowner to exclusive possession of the growing crops… Monsanto have that entitlement under their written agreements with the growers. This defence cannot succeed."
"It seems to me that there is a clear difference between a licence granted for the purpose of access, which does not provide effective control over the land, and a licence to occupy which does. In the instance case, if the developers had occupied the land prior to protest camps being set up, they might have been able to argue that as a fact they did occupy and have effective control so as to bring themselves within that concept as recognised by Laws LJ. However, it does not seem to me that it was in any way legitimate to imply terms into the licence or to construe the licence, clause 6, so as to provide for that degree of control by contract. In my view, the first appeal should be allowed. The developers did not have a contractual right to occupy or have possession with the effective control that is necessary if Dutton is to apply. They simply had a contractual right to access which is not sufficient for Ord 113 purposes."
"In my view it is important not to confuse contractual rights, in relation to which the developers may well have rights against any person who seeks to interfere therewith, with the right of possession, which is the foundation of an Ord 113 remedy."
"[42] The situation must be judged as at the time when the Council's Notice to Quit had taken effect. At that time Alamo no longer had an estate in the land. However, since the Council had, as is conceded, required Alamo to take proceedings to evict the tenants so as to be able to hand over the properties with vacant possession, it seems to us that the effect of the Exception was to confer on Alamo a continuing right to possession for that purpose and therefore the situation is exactly as that described in para 39 above. That was the evident intention behind its inclusion in the Lease, against the background of the decisions in Dutton and Countryside. Had the Council intended to grant Alamo any lesser right it would have been ineffective for the very purpose which the Council wished Alamo to achieve.
[43] The defendants do not claim any right themselves to occupy the premises and the Council, which is entitled to the premises, has asked Alamo to evict the defendants so as to be able, as near as may be, to fulfil its covenant to hand over the premises with vacant possession. Possession proceedings seem eminently suitable for achieving this aim."
Lord Justice Treacy:
Lady Justice Hallett: