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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Locke, R. (On the Application of) v Revenue And Customs [2019] EWCA Civ 1909 (07 November 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1909.html Cite as: [2019] BTC 30, [2019] WLR(D) 616, [2020] 1 All ER 459, [2019] STC 2543, [2019] STI 1805, [2019] EWCA Civ 1909 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION (ADMINISTRATIVE COURT)
MR JUSTICE LEWIS
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division))
LADY JUSTICE ROSE
and
LADY JUSTICE SIMLER
____________________
THE QUEEN (on the application of ALASDAIR LOCKE) |
Appellant |
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- and – |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
____________________
Richard Vallat QC and David Yates QC (instructed by Solicitor's Office, HMRC) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 15 October 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Rose:
Background
The statutory provisions
"353 General Provision
"(1) Where a person pays interest in any year of assessment, that person, if he makes a claim to the relief, shall for that year of assessment be entitled (subject to sections 359 to 368 of this Act ….) to relief in accordance with this section in respect of so much (if any) of the amount of that interest as is eligible for relief under this section by virtue of sections 359 to 365."
"362 Loan to buy into partnership
Subject to section 363 to 365, interest is eligible for relief under section 353 if it is interest on a loan to an individual to defray money applied –
(a) in purchasing a share in a partnership; or
(b) in contributing money to a partnership by way of capital or premium or in advancing money to a partnership, where the money contributed or advanced is used wholly for the purposes of the trade, profession or vocation carried on by the partnership; or
(c) in paying off another loan interest on which would have been eligible for relief under that section had the loan not been paid off (on the assumption, if the loan was free of interest, that it carried interest);
and the conditions stated in subsection (2) below are satisfied."
"204 Circumstances in which a follower notice may be given
(1) HMRC may give a notice (a "follower notice") to a person ("P") if Conditions A to D are met.
"(2) Condition A is that—
(a) a tax enquiry is in progress into a return or claim made by P in relation to a relevant tax, or
(b) P has made a tax appeal (by notifying HMRC or otherwise) in relation to a relevant tax, but that appeal has not yet been—
(i) determined by the tribunal or court to which it is addressed, or
(ii) abandoned or otherwise disposed of.
(3) Condition B is that the return or claim or, as the case may be, appeal is made on the basis that a particular tax advantage ("the asserted advantage") results from particular tax arrangements ("the chosen arrangements").
(4) Condition C is that HMRC is of the opinion that there is a judicial ruling which is relevant to the chosen arrangements.
(5) Condition D is that no previous follower notice has been given to the same person (and not withdrawn) by reference to the same tax advantage, tax arrangements, judicial ruling and tax period.
(6) A follower notice may not be given after the end of the period of 12 months beginning with the later of—
(a) the day on which the judicial ruling mentioned in Condition C is made, and
(b) the day the return or claim to which subsection (2)(a) refers was received by HMRC or (as the case may be) the day the tax appeal to which subsection (2)(b) refers was made."
"205 "Judicial ruling" and circumstances in which a ruling is "relevant"
(1) This section applies for the purposes of this Chapter.
(2) "Judicial ruling" means a ruling of a court or tribunal on one or more issues.
(3) A judicial ruling is "relevant" to the chosen arrangements if—
(a) it relates to tax arrangements,
(b) the principles laid down, or reasoning given, in the ruling would, if applied to the chosen arrangements, deny the asserted advantage or a part of that advantage, and
(c) it is a final ruling.
(4) A judicial ruling is a "final ruling" if it is—
(a) a ruling of the Supreme Court, or
(b) a ruling of any other court or tribunal in circumstances where—
(i) no appeal may be made against the ruling,
(ii) if an appeal may be made against the ruling with permission, the time limit for applications has expired and either no application has been made or permission has been refused,
(iii) if such permission to appeal against the ruling has been granted or is not required, no appeal has been made within the time limit for appeals, or
(iv) if an appeal was made, it was abandoned or otherwise disposed of before it was determined by the court or tribunal to which it was addressed."
"to change the financial benefit of tax avoidance arrangements by ending the economic benefit to taxpayers of retaining an amount equal to the disputed tax until the issue is finally determined against them (if the arrangements are ultimately held to be ineffective)."
The Eclipse 35 litigation
"5. The Commissioners also pressed us to decide (should we find that Eclipse 35 was carrying on a trade) the further question of whether moneys borrowed by Eclipse 35's members and used by them to contribute capital to Eclipse 35 were moneys used for the purposes of such trade. For the reasons we give below we do not consider that that is an issue which is within the scope of the appeal we are required to determine."
"11. It thus emerges that in order for a member to claim tax relief in relation to interest due in respect of borrowings made to contribute to the capital of Eclipse 35, it has to be shown that Eclipse 35 was carrying on a trade and that the borrowed money used to contribute to Eclipse 35 was used wholly for the purposes of that trade …"
"4. Members of Eclipse 35 borrowed money to contribute to its capital. They paid interest on the money borrowed. They may be able to claim tax relief in respect of that interest but only if Eclipse 35 was carrying on a trade and only if the borrowed money was used wholly for the purpose of that trade. That is the combined effect of the Income Tax (Trading and Other Income) Act 2005 ('ITTOIA') s 863 and the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 ('TA 1988') ss 353 and 362.
5. Although the closure notice (and so this appeal) relates to Eclipse 35 itself rather than the personal tax position of any of its members, what is important in practical terms is whether the members are entitled to tax relief in respect of interest on their borrowings. Accordingly, it is convenient to treat TA 1988, s 362(1) as the critical provision by way of background."
Mr Locke's follower notices and accelerated payment notices
"• became a member in an LLP which entered into a series of transactions in relation to the acquisition, distribution and marketing of film rights;
• used borrowed money to contribute capital to the LLP and paid interest on the money borrowed;
• claimed relief in the year ended 5 April 2006 in respect of the interest paid on the money [he] borrowed on the basis that the LLP carried on a trade and that the borrowed money was used for the purpose of trade. The claim included a claim for relief against income arising from the LLP, and further a claim for relief against the remainder of [his] total income. The claim for relief against the remainder of [his] total income is the "asserted advantage" of the arrangements."
"Applying the reasoning in Eclipse 35 v HMRC to your arrangements would produce the result that Eclipse Film Partners No 10 LLP was not trading. The arrangements involving Eclipse Film Partners No 10 LLP were of the same character, and had the same results, as those involving Eclipse 35. Eclipse Film Partners No 10 LLP was therefore not carrying on a trade for the same reasons Eclipse 35 was found not to be carrying on a trade."
"HMRC consider that the principles laid down or the reasoning given in the Eclipse 35 ruling would, if applied to your arrangements, deny the asserted advantage.
Making a contribution to a partnership and buying a share in a partnership are two different things. The facts show that what you did was to make a contribution to a partnership. Consequently, if relief were to be available to you at all in relation to the chosen arrangements, it would need to be available under section 362(1)(b) ICTA. Therefore, when applied to the circumstances of your investment, the Eclipse 35 ruling has the effect that you are not entitled to relief under section 362(1)(b), or at all."
"I consider that the chosen arrangements are sufficiently similar to those in Eclipse 35 for the principles and reasoning in Eclipse 35 to be applied. It is HMRC's view that Eclipse Film Partners No 35 LLP's business model is fundamentally the same as the other Eclipse LLPs (including Eclipse Film Partners No 10 LLP) and that applying the same principles and reasoning would result in the conclusion that those LLPs were also not trading.
I am satisfied that the principles or reasoning given by the FTT in Eclipse 35, would, if applied to the chosen arrangements, result in the asserted advantage being denied in whole or in part and that Eclipse 35 is a "relevant" judicial ruling."
The judgment below
"41. The tax advantage in the present case is the claim for relief on the payment of interest. On the wording of section 353 ICTA, it is that section which gives rise to the right to claim relief as appears from its wording – if a person pays interest, and he makes a claim for relief, he is entitled to "relief in accordance with this section". That is the particular tax advantage which the claimant seeks in respect of the amount of interest as is eligible. The provisions in section 362 ICTA are ways of determining the amount of the interest which is eligible for relief under section 353 ICTA. In those circumstances, it would not be right to characterise section 362(1)(a) as giving rise to one type of tax advantage – relief on interest on borrowing used to purchase a share in a partnership – and section 362(1)(b) as giving rise to a different type of tax advantage – interest on capital contributions paid to a partnership. Each of those subsections set out conditions governing eligibility for a claim for interest rather than setting out the entitlement to claim relief on interest."
"46. … They are entitled to consider the nature of the arrangements in the Eclipse 35 ruling and the chosen arrangements in the present case to determine if there is a sufficient similarity such that the reasoning in the ruling would apply."
"53. I understand the point made by Mr Ewart that no tribunal or court has yet ruled on the question of whether becoming a member of a partnership on agreeing to provide finance to that partnership can be characterised as the purchase of a share in the partnership rather than a capital contribution to the partnership. However, the question is the proper interpretation of the provisions of Part 4 of the 2014 Act. Given the nature of the arrangements in the Eclipse 35 case, and the similarity between those arrangements and the claimant's chosen arrangements, the defendants are entitled to form the view that the Eclipse 35 ruling would, if applied to the claimant's chosen arrangements, deny the claimant the tax advantages he seeks. If he wishes to maintain that he is entitled to that relief because the chosen arrangements are to be given a different legal characterisation from that in the Eclipse 35 case, then he must do so on the basis that he is liable to a penalty and cannot enjoy the benefit of the understated tax pending the outcome of that claim."
Ground 1 of the appeal
"(2) "Tax advantage" includes—
(a) relief or increased relief from tax,
(b) repayment or increased repayment of tax,
(c) avoidance or reduction of a charge to tax or an assessment to tax,
(d) avoidance of a possible assessment to tax,
(e) deferral of a payment of tax or advancement of a repayment of tax, and
(f) avoidance of an obligation to deduct or account for tax."
Ground 2 of the appeal
"must be of the opinion that the principles or reasoning in the ruling in question would deny the advantage, not merely that they would be more likely than not to do so."
"even where a statutory power authorises an intrusion upon the right of access to the courts, it is interpreted as authorising only such a degree of intrusion as is reasonably necessary to fulfil the objective of the provision in question."
"That public statement of HMRC's opinion demonstrates that HMRC does not hold the opinion that the question of trade determines the question of the availability of interest relief pursuant to a claim made under section 353 ICTA 1988, given that our client clearly made a "subscription for capital in a Limited Liability Partnership".
Simler LJ
Underhill LJ