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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Revenue And Customs v MCX Dunlin (UK) Ltd [2021] EWCA Civ 186 (17 February 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/186.html Cite as: [2021] EWCA Civ 186, [2021] STC 474, [2021] BTC 8, [2021] STI 764 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
REVENUE LIST (ChD)
Mr Justice Fancourt
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE NEWEY
and
LORD JUSTICE BAKER
____________________
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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MCX DUNLIN (UK) LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
David Goldberg QC (instructed by Ernst & Young LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 19 & 20 January 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Newey:
Basic facts
The statutory framework
Petroleum revenue tax
"the assessable profit accruing to him in any chargeable period from that field, as reduced under section 7 of this Act by any allowable losses and under section 8 of this Act by reference to his share, if any, of the oil allowance for that period, subject however to the limit imposed in his case by section 9 of this Act".
"Chargeable periods" are the half years to the end of June and December of each year.
"(1) Where the Board have determined under Schedule 2 to this Act that an allowable loss has accrued to a participator in a chargeable period from an oil field, then subject to the following provisions of this section, the assessable profit accruing to him from the field in any succeeding chargeable period shall be treated as reduced by the amount of that allowable loss, or by so much of that amount as cannot, under this subsection or on a claim (if made) under subsection (2) below, be relieved against the assessable profit accruing to him from the field in any earlier chargeable period.
(2) Where the Board have determined under Schedule 2 to this Act that an allowable loss has accrued to a participator in a chargeable period from an oil field, the participator may make a claim requiring that the loss be in the first instance set against any assessable profit which accrued to him from the field in any preceding chargeable period; and the assessable profit which so accrued to him in any such period shall then be treated as reduced by the amount of the loss, or by so much of that amount as cannot be relieved under this subsection against any assessable profit accruing to him from the field in a later chargeable period.
(3) Where—
(a) the Board have determined under Schedule 2 to this Act that an allowable loss has accrued to a participator in a chargeable period from an oil field; and
(b) the winning of oil from that field has permanently ceased,
then so much of that allowable loss as cannot under subsection (1) or (2) above be relieved against assessable profits accruing to the participator from the field shall be relieved under this subsection by treating the assessable profit accruing to him from the field in any chargeable period as reduced by the amount of the loss, or by so much of that amount as cannot be relieved under this section against the assessable profit so accruing to him in a later chargeable period."
Section 8 provides for a participator's liability to PRT to be reduced by the cash equivalent of his share of an allowance of 250,000 metric tonnes per oil field per chargeable period, provided that the total allowance for an oil field is not to exceed a specified figure (5 million metric tonnes following the amendment of section 8 by the Finance (No. 2) Act 1979).
"(1) Where it appears to the Board that, in accordance with the provisions of this Part of this Act, an assessable profit has accrued to a participator in a chargeable period from a taxable field, they shall make an assessment to tax on the participator and shall give him notice of the assessment.
…
(2) Where it appears to the Board that, in accordance with those provisions, an allowable loss has accrued to a participator in a chargeable period from a taxable field, they shall make a determination that the loss is allowable to the participator and shall give him notice of the determination.
(3) Where it appears to the Board that, in accordance with those provisions, neither an assessable profit nor an allowable loss has accrued to a participator in a chargeable period, they shall make a determination to that effect and shall give him notice of the determination.
(4) A notice of assessment for a chargeable period shall state the amount of any allowable losses which, in accordance with those provisions, have been set against the assessable profit for that period.
(5) A notice of assessment or determination shall state that the participator may appeal against the assessment or determination in accordance with paragraph 14 below.
(6) After the service of the notice of assessment or the notice of determination the assessment or determination, as the case may be, shall not be altered except in accordance with the express provisions of this Part of this Act (including the provisions applied by paragraph 1 above)."
Paragraph 12 allows assessments and determinations to be supplemented or amended. Before it was amended by the Finance Act 2009, paragraph 12 provided:
"(1) Where it appears to the Board—
(a) that the assessable profit charged to tax by or stated in an assessment ought to be or to have been larger or smaller; or
(b) that the allowable loss stated in an assessment or a determination of loss ought to be or to have been larger or smaller; or
(c) that, where they made a determination that neither an assessable profit nor an allowable loss accrued in a chargeable period, they ought to have made an assessment to tax or a determination of loss for that period; or
(d) that for any chargeable period they ought to have made an assessment to tax instead of a determination of loss or a determination of loss instead of an assessment to tax,
the Board may make such assessments or determinations or such amendments of assessments or determinations as may be necessary; and where the Board exercise any of their powers under this paragraph in relation to a chargeable period, they may make such assessments or determinations or amendments of assessments or determinations for other chargeable periods as may be necessary in consequence of the exercise of those powers.
(2) Where under sub-paragraph (1) above it appears to the Board that the assessable profit for a chargeable period ought to have been larger and that the deficiency resulted from an excessive allowable loss accruing in a subsequent period having been set against the profit for that period, the Board may (notwithstanding anything in section 34 of the Taxes Management Act 1970 (ordinary time limit for assessments)) make a further assessment by virtue of sub-paragraph (1) above at any time not later than six years after the end of the chargeable period in which the allowable loss accrued.
(3) Where under this paragraph the Board make an assessment or determination or amend an assessment or determination they shall give notice thereof to the participator concerned; and sub-paragraphs (4), (5) and (6) of paragraph 10 above shall apply in relation to any such assessment, determination or amendment as they apply in relation to an assessment or determination under that paragraph."
The "provisions applied by paragraph 1" to which there is reference in paragraph 10(6) are provisions of the Taxes Management Act 1970 ("TMA 1970"), with specified modifications.
"If an appeal under subparagraph (1) is notified to the tribunal and it appears to the tribunal that the assessment, determination or amendment is wrong—
(a) because no, or a smaller, assessable profit or a, or a larger, allowable loss has accrued for the chargeable period in question; or
(b) because a, or a larger, assessable profit or no, or a smaller, allowable loss has accrued for that period,
the tribunal shall vary the assessment, determination or amendment in such manner, or substitute such assessment or determination, as may be required; and it shall be for the participator to satisfy the tribunal as to any matter within paragraph (a) above."
"(1) This paragraph applies where—
(a) an assessment made on a participator for a chargeable period or an amendment of such an assessment (in this paragraph referred to as 'the relevant assessment or amendment') gives effect to relief under subsection (2) or subsection (3) of section 7 of this Act for one or more allowable losses accruing in a later chargeable period (in this paragraph referred to, in relation to the relevant assessment or amendment, as 'the relief for losses carried back'); and
(b) the later chargeable period referred to in paragraph (a) above ends after 30th June 1991; and
(c) an amount of tax becomes repayable to the participator by virtue of the relevant assessment or amendment (whether wholly or partly by reason of giving effect to the relief for losses carried back).
(2) In the following provisions of this paragraph, so much of the repayment of tax referred to in sub-paragraph (1)(c) above as is attributable to giving effect to the relief for losses carried back is referred to as 'the appropriate repayment' and, in relation to the appropriate repayment, the chargeable period for which the relevant assessment or amendment is made is referred to as 'the repayment period'.
…
(4) Subject to sub-paragraph (6) below where this paragraph applies, the amount of interest which, by virtue of paragraph 16 above, is carried by the appropriate repayment shall not exceed the difference between—
(a) the relevant percentage of the amount of the allowable loss or losses referred to in sub-paragraph (1)(a) above which is treated as reducing the assessable profit of the repayment period; and
(b) the amount of an appropriate repayment.
(5) For the purposes of sub-paragraph (4)(a) above—
(a) where the repayment period ends on or before 30th June 1993, the relevant percentage, in relation to the amount of the loss or losses which is treated as reducing the assessable profit accruing to the participator for that period is 85 per cent.; and
(b) in relation to the amount of the loss or losses which is treated as reducing the assessable profit accruing to the participator for any later repayment period, the relevant percentage is 60 per cent.
(6) If, in order to give effect to the relief for losses carried back, a repayment of APRT falls, or will on the making of a claim fall, to be made with respect to a chargeable period which is the repayment period in relation to the appropriate repayment, the reference in sub-paragraph (4)(b) above to the appropriate repayment shall be construed as a reference to the aggregate of that repayment and the repayment of APRT.
(7) In sub-paragraph (6) above 'APRT' means advance petroleum revenue tax paid under Chapter II of Part VI of the Finance Act 1982."
"(1) This paragraph applies in any case where—
(a) such an allowable loss as falls to be relieved under section 7(3) [of OTA 1975] accrues to the new participator from the field in a chargeable period ending after 17th March 2004, but
(b) some or all of the loss cannot be relieved under section 7(3) against assessable profits accruing to him from the field.
(2) So much of the loss as cannot be so relieved ('the remaining loss') shall be regarded as an allowable unrelievable field loss in relation to the new participator ('the loss-maker') only to the extent that—
(a) so much of it as cannot be relieved in accordance with sub-paragraphs (3) to (6) below, exceeds
(b) the aggregate of any relevant previous participators' expenditure unrelated to the field (see sub-paragraphs (10) and (11) below).
(3) The remaining loss shall be treated as an allowable loss which falls to be relieved under section 7(3) against so much of any assessable profits accruing to the old participator from the field as is attributable to his represented interest (see sub-paragraphs (9) and (12) below).
…
(5) Any relief by virtue of sub-paragraph (3) above shall be given against the assessable profits accruing to the old participator in an earlier chargeable period only to the extent to which it cannot be given against the assessable profits accruing to him in a later chargeable period…."
"Corporation tax: deduction of petroleum revenue tax in computing income
(1) Where a participator in an oil field has paid or is treated by virtue of subsection (1A) below as having paid any petroleum revenue tax with which he was chargeable for a chargeable period not being advance petroleum revenue tax, then, in computing for corporation tax the amount of his income arising in the relevant accounting period from oil extraction activities or oil rights, there shall be deducted an amount equal to that petroleum revenue tax; and there shall be made all such adjustments of assessments to corporation tax as are required in order to give effect to this subsection.
For the purposes of this subsection the relevant accounting period, in relation to any petroleum revenue tax paid or treated as having been paid by a company, is
(a) the accounting period of the company in or at the end of which the chargeable period for which that tax was charged ends; or
(b) if that chargeable period ends after the accounting period of the company in or at the end of which the trade giving rise to the income referred to above is permanently discontinued, that accounting period.
(1A) If and so far as any liability to an amount of petroleum revenue tax for any chargeable period is satisfied by an amount of advance petroleum tax paid for that or any earlier chargeable period, that amount of petroleum revenue tax shall be treated for the purposes of this section as having been paid on the date on which it became due.
(2) If some or all of the petroleum revenue tax in respect of which a deduction has been made under subsection (1) above is subsequently repaid, that deduction shall be reduced or extinguished accordingly; and any additional assessment to corporation tax required in order to give effect to this subsection may be made at any time not later than six years after the end of the accounting period in which the first-mentioned tax was repaid…."
Advance petroleum revenue tax
"(3) The aggregate of—
(a) any APRT which is payable and paid by a participator in respect of any chargeable period and not repaid, and
(b) any APRT which is carried forward from the previous chargeable period by virtue of subsection (4) below,
shall be set against the participator's liability for petroleum revenue tax charged in any assessment made on him in respect of the assessable profit accruing to him in the period referred to in paragraph (a) above from the oil field in question (which liability is in this Chapter referred to as his liability for petroleum revenue tax for a chargeable period) and shall, accordingly, discharge a corresponding amount of that liability.
(4) If, for any chargeable period, the aggregate of—
(a) any APRT which is payable and paid by a participator for that period and not repaid, and
(b) any APRT carried forward from the previous chargeable period by virtue of this subsection,
exceeds the participator's liability for petroleum revenue tax for that period, the excess shall be carried forward as an accretion to any APRT paid (and not repaid) for the next chargeable period; and any reference in this Chapter to a participator's APRT credit for a chargeable period is a reference to the aggregate of any APRT paid for that period and not repaid and any APRT carried forward from the previous chargeable period by virtue of this subsection."
"(1) If it appears to the Board—
(a) that any amount of APRT credit which has been set off against a participator's assessed liability to petroleum revenue tax for any chargeable period ought not to have been so set off, or that the amount so set off has become excessive, or
(b) that, disregarding any liability to or credit for APRT, a participator is entitled to a repayment of petroleum revenue tax for any chargeable period,
then, for the purpose of securing that the liabilities of the participator to petroleum revenue tax and APRT (including interest on unpaid tax) for the chargeable period in question are what they ought to have been, the Board may make such assessments to, and shall make such repayments of, petroleum revenue tax and APRT as in their judgment are necessary in the circumstances.
(2) In a case falling within paragraph (a) of subsection (1) above, any necessary assessment to petroleum revenue tax may, where the revised amount of set off is ascertained as a result of an appeal, be made at any time before the expiry of the period of six years beginning at the end of the chargeable period in which the appeal is finally determined; and in a case falling within paragraph (b) of that subsection any necessary assessment to APRT may be made at any time before the expiry of the period of six years beginning at the end of the chargeable period in which the participator became entitled as mentioned in that paragraph.
(5) Paragraphs 13, 14 and 15 of Schedule 2 to the principal Act [i.e. OTA 1975] (payment of tax, appeals and interest on tax) apply in relation to an assessment to petroleum revenue tax under subsection (1) above as they apply to an assessment under that Schedule."
"carry interest from—
(a) two months after the end of the chargeable period in respect of which the APRT or the instalment was paid, or
(b) the date on which the amount was paid,
whichever is the later, until the order for repayment is issued".
"(1) If a participator in an oil field has an excess of APRT credit for the ninth chargeable period following the first chargeable period referred to in section 139(1)(a) of this Act, then, on the making of a claim the amount of that excess shall be repaid to him.
(2) For the purposes of this paragraph there is an excess of APRT credit for the ninth chargeable period referred to in sub-paragraph (1) above if any of that credit would, apart from this paragraph, fall to be carried forward to the next chargeable period in accordance with section 139(4) of this Act; and the amount of the excess is the amount of the credit which would fall to be so carried forward.
(3) A claim under sub-paragraph (1) above shall be made not earlier than two months after the expiry of the ninth chargeable period referred to in that sub-paragraph.
..
(5) Paragraph 10(4) above shall not apply to any amount of APRT which is repayable only on the making of a claim under sub-paragraph (1) above.
(6) Amounts repaid to a participator by virtue of this paragraph shall be disregarded in computing his income for the purposes of income tax or corporation tax."
In other words, a participator could from 1987 claim repayment of any excess of APRT credit, but no interest would be due.
The issues
i) Were the repayments on which HMRC have declined to pay interest of APRT or PRT?
ii) Was it appropriate for MCX to bring a claim under CPR Part 8?
"I consider that [MCX] is correct and that the tax repaid to the old participators in 2015 was overpaid PRT, not excess APRT credit. There was no excess APRT credit capable of being the subject of a claim by the old participators in 1987 because all the APRT paid was in law validly used before then to discharge PRT liability. It is only as a result of the loss carry back provisions that the PRT liability is seen to have been excessive, with the simple consequence that a repayment of PRT was due and should have been repaid with interest."
Turning to the second issue, HMRC had argued that "the old participators (or [MCX] standing in their shoes) [had] a statutory right of appeal against HMRC's amended assessment that they were required to pursue if they wished to challenge the refusal to pay interest on part of the repaid tax" or, alternatively, that any claim "should … have been brought by way of judicial review within the time limit applying to such claims" (see paragraph 54 of the judgment). The Judge, however, "reject[ed] the argument that the old participators could and should have appealed one or other of the amended assessments, if they wished to challenge a decision made by HMRC about what sums were to be repaid" (paragraph 58 of the judgment) and further considered that "[t]he dispute – which is purely one about the meaning and effect of a tax statute – is one that was appropriate for the Chancery Division to determine in the way that it has done" (paragraph 59 of the judgment).
Were the repayments on which HMRC have declined to pay interest of APRT or PRT?
"Relief of a loss by setting it against an assessable profit of an earlier chargeable period could trigger repayment of APRT as well as a repayment of petroleum revenue tax. APRT was a tax paid on gross profits and, as its name suggests, was a tax which could be set against a participator's liability for petroleum revenue tax for the relevant chargeable period (see s 139 of the Finance Act 1982). But in the cap calculation, as originally enacted, 'the amount of the appropriate repayment' in item (b) was a reference to petroleum revenue tax alone. Thus the impact of the cap differed according to whether the tax being repaid was solely petroleum revenue tax, as was the position before APRT was introduced in 1982, or was part petroleum revenue tax and part APRT. In the latter case, but not the former, a claim for loss relief could trigger aggregate payments to the taxpayer in excess of 85% of the loss in question—indeed, in excess of 100% of the loss. On top of the 85% cap would be a repayment of APRT, which was payable at rates varying between 5% and 20%."
"(1) Subject to subsection (2) below, advance corporation tax paid by a company (and not repaid) in respect of any distribution made by it in an accounting period shall be set against its liability to corporation tax on any income charged to corporation tax for that accounting period and shall accordingly discharge a corresponding amount of that liability.
…
(3) Where in the case of any accounting period of a company there is an amount of surplus advance corporation tax (that is to say, advance corporation tax which cannot be set against the company's liability to corporation tax for that period because the company has no income charged to corporation tax for that period or because of subsection (2) above) the company may, within two years after the end of that period, claim to have the whole or any part of that amount treated for the purposes of this section (but not of any further application of this subsection) as if it were advance corporation tax paid in respect of distributions made by the company in any of its accounting periods beginning in the two years preceding that period (but so that the amount which is the subject of the claim is set, so far as possible, against the company's liability for a more recent accounting period before a more remote one) and corporation tax shall, so far as may be required, be repaid accordingly …."
"The revenue's case is simple. They argue that if a taxpaying company included relevant details of ACT paid in its tax return, section 239(1) (5) mandated an automatic set-off of the ACT against the company's liability for MCT. If, on a proper understanding of the law, the company did not owe sufficient MCT in the relevant accounting period, the ACT remained surplus and available to be set off in the next accounting period under section 239(4). In other words, the revenue argue that the law treats an unlawful MCT charge as a nullity, with the result that there is no set off under section 239(1) and no enrichment of the revenue by the payment of the ACT, which remained available to offset the taxpaying company's lawful MCT in other accounting periods."
"In our view, the revenue are correct in their submission that, if an apparent charge to MCT was unlawful, that charge was a nullity. The ACT could not have been set against a nullity but remained available to be carried back if a claim were made under section 239(3) or for automatic set-off against lawful MCT in a subsequent accounting period under section 239(4) or otherwise to be utilised."
"For my part I take the correct approach in construing a deeming provision to be to give the words used their ordinary and natural meaning, consistent so far as possible with the policy of the Act and the purposes of the provisions so far as such policy and purposes can be ascertained; but if such construction would lead to injustice or absurdity, the application of the statutory fiction should be limited to the extent needed to avoid such injustice or absurdity, unless such application would clearly be within the purposes of the fiction. I further bear in mind that because one must treat as real that which is only deemed to be so, one must treat as real the consequences and incidents inevitably flowing from or accompanying that deemed state of affairs, unless prohibited from doing so."
In an appropriate case, therefore, "one must treat as real the consequences and incidents inevitably flowing from" a deemed state of affairs.
"Section 17 of [OTA 1975], as amended, provides that an amount equal to any PRT paid will be deducted from income arising for the purposes of CT [i.e. corporation tax] in that year; further, that if PRT is so deducted but subsequently repaid, the deduction is thereupon reduced or extinguished and an additional assessment to CT for the year of the losses may be made. It is understood to be HMRC's case that the repayment of tax to the old participators (including what HMRC contend to be a repayment of excess APRT) results in a reduction of the relevant deductions for CT purposes. In other words, the PRT paid (in part by way of set-off of APRT) was fully deductible for CT purposes and now that deduction should be reversed as a result of the repayment of tax. However, if HMRC is right on its arguments in this case, the tax repaid is excess APRT credit, APRT is a separate tax from PRT, and so PRT was not repaid within the meaning of s.17(2) of the 1975 Act. The effect, if HMRC is right, is that no CT adjustment would be required. That difficulty does not arise if the repayment of tax is treated as a repayment of PRT."
"if the legislation is to be read as providing for a re-crediting of APRT upon carry back of losses, with the effect that the set-off and discharge of PRT is retrospectively reversed, there would retrospectively have been additional APRT in the chargeable period in question to carry forwards and set-off against PRT liability for the next chargeable period, resulting in an overpayment of PRT by cash in that chargeable period. If the legislation does indeed require the re-writing of history in the way that HMRC suggests, it is unclear why the re-writing is only partial so as to produce a notional excess of APRT in 1987 when, if history were fully re-written, that would not have been the case."
Was it appropriate for MCX to bring a claim under CPR Part 8?
"It is well established that if Parliament has laid down a statutory appeal process against a decision of HMRC, a person aggrieved by the decision and wishing to challenge it must use the statutory process. It is an abuse of the court's process to seek to do so through proceedings in the High Court or the County Court."
"11. … The present disputes concern claims for group relief. The way a taxpayer claims group relief depends on whether the claim relates to an accounting period before or after 1 July 1999. Before that date the corporation tax (pay and file) system was in force. This has now been replaced by the corporation tax (self-assessment) system. For present purposes this difference is immaterial. What matters is that, whichever system is applicable, an assessment which disallows a group relief claim cannot be altered except in accordance with the express provisions of the tax legislation. Statute so provides: see, in respect of the pay and file system, section 30A of the Taxes Management Act 1970 (as inserted by the Finance Act 1994, section 196, Schedule 19, Part 1, paragraph 5) and, in respect of the self-assessment system, paragraphs 47(2) and 97 of Schedule 18 to the Finance Act 1998. Further, the statutory code makes its own provision for appeals. Under both the 'pay and file' system and the self-assessment system a taxpayer has a right of appeal to the appeal commissioners against assessments of tax, including amendments made by the revenue to a taxpayer's tax return. The appeal commissioners' findings of fact are final. In appropriate cases a further appeal lies to the High Court by way of case stated on a point of law. Where the appeal commissioners reduce the amount of an assessment, any overpaid tax must be repaid to the taxpayer, with a repayment supplement by way of interest as provided in section 825 of the ICTA.
12. Clearly the purpose intended to be achieved by this elaborate, long established statutory scheme would be defeated if it were open to a taxpayer to leave undisturbed an assessment with which he is dissatisfied and adopt the expedient of applying to the High Court for a declaration of how much tax he owes and, if he has already paid the tax, an order for repayment of the amount he claims was wrongly assessed. In substance, although not in form, that would be an appeal against an assessment. In such a case the effect of the relief sought in the High Court, if granted, would be to negative an assessment otherwise than in accordance with the statutory code. Thus in such a case the High Court proceedings will be struck out as an abuse of the court's process. The proceedings would be an abuse because the dispute presented to the court for decision would be a dispute Parliament has assigned for resolution exclusively to a specialist tribunal. The dissatisfied taxpayer should have recourse to the appeal procedure provided by Parliament. He should follow the statutory route.
13. I question whether in this straightforward type of case the court has any real discretion to exercise. Rather, the conclusion that the proceedings are an abuse follows automatically once the court is satisfied the taxpayer's court claim is an indirect way of seeking to achieve the same result as it would be open to the taxpayer to achieve directly by appealing to the appeal commissioners. The taxpayer must use the remedies provided by the tax legislation. This approach accords with the views expressed in authorities such as Argosam Finance Co Ltd v Oxby [1965] Ch 390, In re Vandervell's Trusts [1971] AC 912 and, more widely, Barraclough v Brown [1897] AC 615."
"56. HMRC … pointed to the terms of the amended assessment dated 26 August 2015, which identified a 'discharge' (repayment) of £1,157,973. This was the principal amount of tax paid pursuant to a 1996 amended assessment for that chargeable period, net of APRT credit. The amended August 2015 assessment was therefore an assessment that only the PRT liability paid in cash should be discharged by oil allowance or exempt allowance leaving an obligation to repay tax. The tax chargeable was shown on that amended assessment as nil. It is difficult to understand how the old participators could have sought to appeal an assessment of nil, other than as regards the appropriateness of the use of allowances rather than allowable losses to set against assessable profits. Even if they could have done so, that amended assessment was not in fact the end of the process of revising their liability to PRT for the chargeable period in question, and HMRC did later repay all PRT paid by means of APRT credit as well as that paid in cash.
57. A further amended assessment dated 18 December 2015 made a nil assessment on the basis that all except a small part of the assessable profits was reduced by allowable losses, with the final small part reduced by oil or exempt allowances. This amended assessment said nothing about the amount of tax to be repaid. In any event, I accept Mr Goldberg's submission that it is no part of an amended assessment of liability to calculate a repayment of tax (or interest) that is due, even if it might helpfully include such information. The old participators therefore could not have appealed the December 2015 amended assessment on the ground that HMRC did not pay full interest on the repaid tax.
58. Accordingly, I reject the argument that the old participators could and should have appealed one or other of the amended assessments, if they wished to challenge a decision made by HMRC about what sums were to be repaid."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Baker:
Lord Justice Underhill: