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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Finmeccanica Global Services Spa v HM Revenue and Customs [2016] EWCA Civ 1105 (17 November 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/1105.html Cite as: [2016] STI 3055, [2016] BVC 41, [2017] STC 1017, [2016] EWCA Civ 1105 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (TAX AND CHANCERY CHAMBER)
The Hon Mrs Justice Rose
[2015] UKUT 0378 (TCC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
and
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
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FINMECCANICA GLOBAL SERVICES Spa (formerly FINMECCANICA GROUP SERVICES SpA) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondent |
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Mr Michael Jones (instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor to HM Revenue and Customs,) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 11 and 12 October 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"36. In 2010 the group's enclosure at Farnborough air show consisted of a pavilion covering about an acre (4,280 m²) which included two chalets, and a static display of about 1½ acres (7,630 m²). The total cost associated with the enclosure was some €14 million in 2010 (€12m for 2008). It was a very substantial exercise. In the open area were displayed a large number of helicopters and fighter aeroplanes; in the pavilion there were areas devoted to particular sister companies' products, meeting rooms etc. The 2008 event was on a similar scale.
37. I have used "enclosure" to describe the area involved and there was indeed a ring fence around the area described above, but the 2010 brochure "Finmeccanica at Farnborough" shows that in addition to the main enclosure there were other Finmeccanica buildings including a Eurofighter chalet. By far the dominant area is the main enclosure. I have used "enclosure" to refer to the totality unless the contrary is indicated.
38. The arranging of the enclosure is the responsibility of FGS. The central administrative function of the group sets the budget for the occasion and specifies an outline the requirements for the overall appearance, themes and the space required for each sector of the group: thus, much oversimplified, its requirements might include a requirement to display eight helicopters and five fixed wing aircraft, to have a lecture theatre with say 200 seats, a separate security systems chalet as part of the enclosure, five meeting rooms and 40 display screens. FGS then discusses this with its sister companies and engages architects to design the pavilion and the enclosure. It discusses the designs with the group companies involved and then, once it has settled on the design, sets about renting space from Farnborough International, the organisers of the airshow, the building of the enclosure, and the organisation of the event.
39. The planning of the event takes about a year. In the course of that year FGS organises and monitors the implementation of contracts for the building works, electricity, gas, plumbing, IT, safety equipment, signage (in particular the display of the "tag" for the year), security, catering, travel and cleaning of the enclosure. It makes arrangements for a press reception and tickets for invitees. It produces a brochure. It arranges speakers. It arranges recordings of the event for the group companies.
40. People wishing to enter the enclosure must have (at least) two passes – one permitting them to enter the airshow and one permitting them to enter the Finmeccanica enclosure. In 2010 there were two separate chalets within the enclosure which required distinct passes, one of which was for Westland. FGS's sister companies indicate whom they wish to invite to the enclosure and FGS obtains passes for them from Farnborough International, the organiser of the air show, and issues separate passes for the enclosure. These invitees are known customers and potential purchasers of the group's equipment and will include military, government and institutional figures.
41. The air show maintains a list of those people other exhibitors have invited, and FGS or its sister companies may offer invitations to customers of other exhibitors they see on the list.
42. Invitations and passes are issued to the press. FGS organises a press reception in conjunction with the show. This is the only part of the event which takes place outside the enclosure. Mr Napolitano was not willing to say why the press were invited – it was a decision made by the marketing and external relations functions in the group. It seemed to me that they were invited to preserve and enhance the external reputation of the group companies.
…..
44. The airshow lasts a week. In such a week some 200 high-level guests (ministers and senior military figures) would be expected to attend the enclosure and more than 1000 potential customers altogether (Mr Napolitano could not be certain how many: he did not dissent from 1000 and was able to say it was less than 10,000). There is a programme for the week - organised by FGS - which includes debates, and talks by outside speakers and speakers from the group.
45. Some 120 group employees are present in the enclosure. Of these about 15 are FGS staff concerned with ensuring that the event runs smoothly - monitoring and servicing the infrastructure, security, catering for staff and the guests and cleaning, and arranging meeting rooms (where presentations are made to specific guests). The remainder are employees of group companies – marketing, external affairs, technical and IT support people. FGS arranges the hotel accommodation and the flights for all the group's staff."
"21. It follows that, when Article 9 is interpreted, Article 9(1) in no way takes precedence over Article 9(2). In every situation, the question which arises is whether it is covered by one of the instances mentioned in Article 9(2); if not, it falls within the scope of Article 9(1)."
"(c) the place of the supply of services relating to:
- cultural, artistic, sporting, scientific, educational, entertainment or similar activities, including the activities of the organizers of such activities, and where appropriate, the supply of ancillary services,
- ancillary transport activities such as loading, unloading, handling and similar activities,
- valuations of movable tangible property,
- work on movable tangible property,
shall be the place where those services are physically carried out;
…..
(e) the place where the following services are supplied when performed for customers established outside the Community or for taxable persons established in the Community but not in the same country as the supplier, shall be the place where the customer has established his business or has a fixed establishment to which the service is supplied or, in the absence of such a place, the place where he has his permanent address or usually resides:
- …..
- advertising services,
- ….."
"The place of supply of services and ancillary services relating to cultural, artistic, sporting, scientific, educational, entertainment or similar activities, such as fairs or exhibitions, including the supply of services of the organisers of such activities, shall be the place where those activities are physically carried out."
"71. I have no doubt that the services which FGS supplied to its sister companies were: (1) designed and used for the purposes of the dissemination of messages intended to inform potential buyers of the existence or quality of the products offered by those companies with a view to increasing the sales of such products, and (2) formed an inseparable part of the centrally coordinated advertising campaigns of the group companies by contributing to and conveying their marketing messages: the presence at the enclosure of employees of the group companies indicated that integration."
32. … It may well be the case that, as the case law cited by the judge indicates, the exceptions to the general location rule are mutually exclusive. But it was common ground that the advertising exception did not apply here because FGS and its recipient sister companies are all established in Italy. The issue of overlap does not arise.
33. Although the CJEU in Inter-Mark did first address the question whether the services there fell within the advertising exception before considering the fairs exception, the situation which the CJEU was considering in that case was different from the situation here. Inter-Mark planned to provide its services to customers established in other Member States or outside the Union. In those circumstances, the advertising exception would be engaged if the services fell within the definition of advertising services. Inter-Mark is not therefore authority for the proposition that whenever services could fall within definition of advertising services they must be regarded as falling outside any other specific exceptions regardless of whether the advertising services exception is actually engaged.
34. If one approaches the question whether a supply falls within one exception by considering first every other kind of supply described in all other exceptions, regardless of whether the other exceptions can apply or not, one risks arriving at too narrow a definition of the services falling within any particular exception. The first step should be to consider the case law on the scope of the fairs exception. By approaching the case in the way it did, the Tribunal here effectively excluded from the scope of the fairs exception any fair or exhibition which had a trade or commercial purpose but without first considering whether the case law on the fairs exception justified such a conclusion."
"Whereas the determination of the place where taxable transactions are effected has been the subject of conflicts concerning jurisdiction as between Member States, in particular as regards supplies of goods for assembly and the supply of services; whereas although the place where a supply of services is effected should in principle be defined as the place where the person supplying the services has his principal place of business, that place should be defined as being in the country of the person to whom the services are supplied, in particular in the case of certain services supplied between taxable persons where the cost of the services is included in the price of the goods."
"15. The most important reason for my rejection of any attempt to resolve the problem of interpretation by means of the natural understanding of the term "advertising services", however, is that substantial interpretative assistance can be found in the objectives of the provision when considered in the light of the fundamental principles of the system of VAT.
It should be recalled that the preamble to the directive states that the country of the person to whom the services are supplied should be the place of supply and consequently the country where the tax is chargeable "in the case of certain services supplied between taxable persons where the cost of the services is included in the price of the goods".
In its reply in the case against Spain, the Commission has also pointed out that the provision should be interpreted in the light of that recital in the preamble.
16. The fundamental principle governing VAT is that it must ultimately be borne by the end consumer, that is to say, the person purchasing the product in question, whether that product be in the form of goods or services.
While it is of course correct to point out that the system of VAT contains a number of exceptions to this principle, the principle must determine the interpretation of provisions which do not unequivocally constitute such exceptions.
17. In accordance with the abovementioned recital in the preamble to the directive, Article 9(2)(e) designates the country of the person to whom the services are supplied as being the country where the tax is chargeable, subject to the specific condition that the services in question are supplied between taxable persons and that the cost of the services is included in the price of the goods.
Services which are designed to promote the sale of goods or services to the end consumer are supplied by the person supplying the service (advertising agency) to the trader (manufacturer or dealer) who wishes to sell a product to the end consumer.
The present cases involve transactions between taxable persons (the trader is not the end consumer) and costs which are included in the price which the end consumer is required to pay for the supplied product and on which he will be required to pay VAT in the country where that tax is ultimately paid."
"15. As may be seen from the seventh recital in the preamble to the Sixth Directive, defining the place of taxation of advertising services as the place where the person to whom the services are supplied has his principal place of business is justified by the fact that the cost of those services, supplied between taxable persons, is included in the price of the goods. The Community legislature therefore considered that, in so far as the person to whom the services are supplied customarily sells the goods or supplies the services advertised in the State where he has his principal place of business, and charges the corresponding VAT to the final consumer, the VAT based on the advertising service should itself be paid by that person to that State. This reasoning is one of the factors which must be taken into account in interpreting the term 'advertising services' in Article 9(2)(e) of the Sixth Directive.
16. The concept of advertising necessarily entails the dissemination of a message intended to inform consumers of the existence and the qualities of a product or service, with a view to increasing sales. Although that message is usually spread, by means of spoken or printed words and/or pictures, by the press, radio and/or television, this can also be done by the partial or exclusive use of other means.
17. In order to determine, where other means are used exclusively, whether the transaction concerned is an advertising service within the meaning of Article 9(2)(e) of the Sixth Directive, it is necessary in each case to take account of all the circumstances surrounding the service in question. One such circumstance, enabling a service to be characterized as 'advertising', exists where the means used have been procured by an advertising agency. However, for a service to be so characterized, it is not an essential condition that the supplier be an advertising agency. It is always possible that an advertising service may be supplied by an undertaking which is not exclusively, or even mainly, engaged in advertising, although this is an unlikely eventuality."
"47. It was clear to me that the sole object of the provision of the enclosure and associated services by FGS to its sister companies was to enable those companies to sell their products."
"19. It is therefore sufficient that a transaction, such as the sale by the supplier to the recipient, in the context of an advertising campaign, of movable tangible property distributed free to consumers or sold to them at a reduced price, or the organization of a cocktail party, a press conference, a seminar, a recreational function or other forms of public relations, should involve the conveying of a message intended to inform the public of the existence and the qualities of a product or service which is the subject-matter of the activity, with a view to increasing the sales of that product or service, for the activity to be characterized as an advertising service within the meaning of Article 9(2)(e) of the Sixth Directive.
20. The same applies to any activity which forms an inseparable part of an advertising campaign and which thereby contributes to the conveying of the advertising message. This is the case with regard to the sale by the supplier to the recipient, in the context of an advertising campaign, of movable tangible property or services provided in the course of various public-relations events, even if those goods and services, considered in isolation, do not involve conveying an advertising message."
"[24] There is a similar purpose underlying the first indent of Article 9(2)(c) which lays down that the place of the supply of services relating inter alia to artistic and entertainment activities and ancillary services is the place where those services are physically carried out. The Community legislature considered that, in so far as the supplier provides his services in the State in which such services are physically carried out and the organiser of the event charges the final consumer VAT in the same State, the VAT charged on the basis of all those services the cost of which is included in the price of the complete service paid for by the final consumer must be paid to that State and not to the State in which the supplier of the service has established his business.
[25] As regards the criteria according to which a specified service is to be regarded as being covered by the first indent of Article 9(2)(c), no particular artistic level is required, and it is not only services relating inter alia to artistic and entertainment activities but also services relating to merely similar activities that fall within its scope.
….
[27] Having regard to the findings made in paragraphs 24 and 25 of this judgment, any services supplied which, although not themselves constituting inter alia an artistic or entertainment activity, are a prerequisite for its performance, must be regarded as a supply of services ancillary to that activity."
"There is a similar purpose underlying the first indent of Article 9(2)(c) of the Sixth Directive, which lays down that the place of the supply of services relating, inter alia, to artistic, sporting and entertainment activities and ancillary services is the place where those services are physically carried out. The Community legislature considered that, in so far as the supplier provides his services in the State in which such services are physically carried out and the organiser of the event charges the final consumer VAT in the same State, the VAT charged on the basis of all those services the cost of which is included in the price of the complete service paid for by that consumer must be paid to that State and not to the State in which the supplier of the service has established his business (see Dudda, paragraph 24)."
"A show or a fair, whatever its theme, seeks to provide to a number of different recipients, as a rule in a single place and on a single occasion, a variety of complex services, with the purpose, in particular, of presenting information, goods or events in such a way as to promote them to the visitors. In those circumstances, it must be possible to regard a show or a fair as being covered by the similar activities referred to in the first indent of Article 9(2) (c) of the Sixth Directive."
"85. As a result it does not seem to me that every fair or exhibition will satisfy this test. In particular provision made for the purpose of persuading attendees to buy something is not similar to the provision of education or entertainment or any of the other specified activities. The purpose of the show or fair considered by the CJEU in Gillan was different from the purpose of Finmeccanica's enclosure. It does not seem to me that it had a similar theme."
"58. While it is true that the setting-up of a stand by a service supplier contributes to promoting an exhibitor's products and must for that reason be done attractively, I do not think, for all that, that it should be regarded as an advertising service within the meaning of Article 56(1)(b) of Directive 2006/112.
59. Admittedly, the mere supply of stands for the purposes of a fair is not the same activity as the fair itself. Nevertheless, stands are the essential physical requirement for the accomplishment of that activity. The sole purpose, therefore, of supplying stands is, I believe, to allow people actually to participate in the fair by enabling exhibitors to present their products.
60. As such, the provision of stands by a supplier of services other than the organiser of the fair or exhibition is a service ancillary to the activity of organising that fair or exhibition, because it is a prerequisite for the performance of that activity.
…
63. Promoting the products presented by exhibitors to visitors is the very purpose of the activity of a fair and the arrangement of stands is undoubtedly a contribution to the achievement of that objective. According to the abovementioned case-law of the Court, however, an advertising service must have the purpose of disseminating a message informing visitors of the qualities of the products and services offered by the exhibitors.
64. On the basis of the information before the Court, that does not appear to be the situation in the main proceedings, the national court simply stating that Inter-Mark takes into account the individual requirements of its customers, in particular as regards the external appearance and functionality of the stands, and may provide transportation and assembly of the parts of the stand at the place where the event is being held."
"20. It follows that the supply of services consisting of the design and temporary provision of a fair or exhibition stand must be considered to be a supply of an advertising service, within the meaning of Article 56(1)(b) of Directive 2006/112, in the case where that stand is used for the dissemination of a message intended to inform the public of the existence or the qualities of the product or service offered by the hirer with a view to increasing the sales of that product or service or where it forms an inseparable part of an advertising campaign and contributes to conveying the advertising message. This will be the case, in particular, where the stand constitutes an aid for the dissemination of a message informing the public of the existence or the qualities of the products or is used for the organisation of promotional events."
"… they are usually provided for specific events, and the place where those complex services are physically carried out is easy to identify, as a rule, since such events take place at specific locations (Gillan Beach, paragraph 24).
24 It follows that a supply of services such as that referred to in the question submitted for a preliminary ruling can be characterised as a supply of ancillary services, within the meaning of Article 52(a) of Directive 2006/112, when it relates to the design and the temporary provision of a stand for a specific fair or exhibition on a cultural, artistic, sporting, scientific, educational, entertainment or similar theme or a stand corresponding to a model in respect of which the organiser of a specific fair or exhibition has prescribed the form, size, material composition or visual appearance.
25 As all the parties concerned which have submitted observations to the Court agree, in such a case the design and the temporary provision of a stand used for purposes of a specific fair or exhibition must be regarded as constituting a supply of services which is ancillary to the activity carried on by the organiser of that fair or exhibition, coming within the scope of Article 52(a) of Directive 2006/112.
26 It is necessary in this regard that the stand should be provided for a fair or an exhibition which takes place, whether on one occasion or repeatedly, in a specific location. As Article 52(a) of Directive 2006/112 requires the charging of VAT at the place where the service is physically carried out, the application of that provision to the supply of a stand which is used at a multitude of fairs or exhibitions taking place in several Member States would risk being excessively complex and would thus jeopardise the reliable and correct charging of VAT."
Lord Justice Davis :
(1) First, the approach inherent in the arguments of Mrs Hamilton as to the ambit of the phrase "advertising services" is extremely broad and, as such, difficult to fit with the decided cases. In truth there are very many business activities which can be said to involve the promotion or marketing of a company's goods or services: be it the shop window display, the smartly dressed and fluent staff, the business pitch made at a meeting and so on. Thus it is evident that not all promotional and marketing activities will correspond, for these VAT purposes, to advertising services.(2) Second, adopting as one part of the decision making process what is said at paragraph 23 of the judgment in Gillan Beach, the place at which the various complex services were carried out is in the present case readily identified as one specific location: Farnborough.
(3) Third, we were referred to the Guidelines resulting from the meeting of the VAT Committee of 30 March 2015. The agreed, albeit not unanimous, view of the Committee was that where a service is susceptible to be covered by more than one of the particular rules relating to supply "the rule which best ensures taxation at the place of actual consumption of the service shall prevail". In the present case it can readily be said that there was here one place of actual consumption: Farnborough.
Lord Justice Beatson :