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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Pirelli Cable Holding NV & Ors v Commissioners of Inland Revenue [2003] EWHC 32 (Ch) (22 January 2003) URL: https://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2003/32.html Cite as: [2003] STC 250, [2003] EWHC 32 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
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(1) PIRELLI CABLE HOLDING NV (2) PIRELLI TYRE HOLDING NV (3) PIRELLI SpA (4)PIRELLI GENERAL PLC (5) PIRELLI PLC | Claimants | |
- and - | ||
THE COMMISSIONERS OF INLAND REVENUE | Defendants |
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Ian Glick QC and Zoe O'Sullivan (instructed by the Solicitor of Inland Revenue) for the Defendants
Hearing dates : 2.12.-5.12.02.
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Park :
ACT | Advance corporation tax |
Article 10 .DTA payment | See paragraphs 6 and 22 to 24 below |
Article 52/43 issue, the | The issue of whether the claimants (or any of them) are entitled to damages or restitution for the breach by the United Kingdom of the article of the EC Treaty which used to be article 52 and now is article 43. |
Athinaiki, or the Athinaiki case | The decision of the CJEC in Athinaiki Zithopiia v Greek State, Case C-294/99, [2001] ECR I-07697. |
Athinaiki issue, the | The issue of whether the claimants (or any of them) are, by reason of the Parent and Subsidiary Directive and the Athinaiki case, entitled to restitution for ACT paid by them. |
CJEC | The Court of Justice of the European Communities |
DTA | Double Taxation Agreement |
GLO | Group litigation order, as to which see the Civil Procedure Rules rules 19.11 to 19.15. |
ICTA | The Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988, in its form before amendments which were made in 1997 and took effect in 1999. |
Imputation system, the | The system which applied in the United Kingdom between 1973 and 1999 for the taxation of dividends, normally requiring companies which paid dividends to pay ACT and conferring tax credits on shareholders who or which received dividends. |
Metallgesellschaft/Hoechst | The combined cases in the CJEC of Metallgesellschaft Ltd and others v Commissioners of Inland Revenue and the Attorney General (Case C-397/98) and (1) Hoechst AG (2) Hoechst United Kingdom Ltd v Commissioners of Inland Revenue and the Attorney General (Case C-410/98). The judgment of the CJEC was delivered on 8 March 2001 and is reported at [2001] STC 452. |
Parent and Subsidiary Directive, the | Council Directive 90/435/EEC of 23 July 1990 on the common system of taxation applicable in the case of parent companies and subsidiaries of different Member States. |
Pirelli General | Pirelli General PLC, the fourth claimant; a United Kingdom company; a wholly owned subsidiary of Pirelli UK. |
Pirelli Italy/Netherlands | A compendious term to cover the first, second and third claimants, of which the third is an Italian company and the first and second are Netherlands companies. Pirelli Italy/Netherlands between them own all of the shares in Pirelli UK. |
Pirelli UK | Pirelli PLC, a United Kingdom company, and the fifth claimant; owned by Pirelli Italy/Netherlands. |
Revenue, the | The Inland Revenue of the United Kingdom; the Commissioners of Inland Revenue. |
Section numbers, or s. followed by a number. | Sections in ICTA. Thus s.247 is section 247 of ICTA. |
Overview
THE ARTICLE 52/43 ISSUE
Background
… the election dividends shall be excluded from .. section 231 and are accordingly not included in references to … the franked investment income of the receiving company …
for conferring on persons not resident in the United Kingdom the right to a tax credit under section 231 in respect of qualifying distributions made to them by companies which are so resident.
This is the point at which I can focus on the precise issue which is in dispute, and it is appropriate that I explain about the Italian and Netherlands DTAs under a new sub-heading.
The relevant provisions of the Italian and Netherlands DTAs
i) Article 10(3)(a)(ii) provides that an Italian recipient of a United Kingdom dividend may be taxed on it by the United Kingdom, but (in the case of a 10% plus corporate shareholder) the United Kingdom tax is limited to 5% of the dividend plus the tax credit to which (as I describe in (ii) below) the recipient is entitled.
ii) Article 10(3)(c) provides for such a recipient of a United Kingdom dividend to receive a United Kingdom tax credit, but the amount of it is equal to half the tax credit to which a United Kingdom resident individual shareholder would be entitled. (This is a true 'tax credit' within the meaning of the United Kingdom legislation: see Union Texas Petroleum Corporation v Critchley (1990) 63 Tax Cases 244.)
iii) Article 10(3)(c) also provides that the Italian recipient is entitled to payment of the excess of the tax credit in (ii) over its liability to United Kingdom tax. If the Italian recipient's only income from a United Kingdom source is the dividend, it will receive the excess of the tax credit in (ii) over the 5% liability in (i).
The summary which I have given in sub-paragraph (i) flows from the following words in article 10(3)(a)(ii) of the DTA:
Where a resident of Italy is entitled to a tax credit in respect of such a dividend [a dividend from a United Kingdom resident company] under sub-paragraph (c) of this paragraph tax may also be charged in the United Kingdom and according to the laws of the United Kingdom on the aggregate of the amount or value of the dividend and the amount of that tax credit at a rate not exceeding 5%.
The summaries in sub-paragraphs (ii) and (iii) flow from article 10(3)(c):
In these circumstances [10% plus holdings] a company which is a resident of Italy and receives dividends from a company which is a resident of the United Kingdom shall, provided it is the beneficial owner of the dividends, be entitled to a tax credit equal to one half of the tax credit to which an individual resident in the United Kingdom would have been entitled had he received those dividends, and to the payment of any excess of that tax credit over its liability to tax in the United Kingdom.
The claims in this case, and the principal issues which arise
If dividends had been paid to Pirelli Italy/Netherlands as group income, would Pirelli Italy/Netherlands have been entitled to the Article 10 DTA payments?
9. Advance corporation tax and the shareholder's tax credit form the core of the new system; they are the essential link between the company's corporation tax and the shareholder's own tax liability. In this way a single rate of 'imputation' can be applied to all distributions regardless of the effective rate at which the company is liable to tax. In its absence there would be difficulties where dividends are paid out of profits which, for one reason or another, have not borne UK corporation tax in full. Clearly it would be wrong in such cases to give the shareholder a credit for tax which has never been paid; and the Select Committee therefore regarded some such preliminary payment as an essential element in an imputation system.
i) In the paragraph the White Paper is dealing only with shareholders resident in the United Kingdom. The previous paragraph, paragraph 8, begins: 'The effect on the UK resident shareholder will be this.' There is a footnote to that sentence. The text of the footnote is: 'The position of a non-resident shareholder is discussed in paragraph 32 below.' The concluding sentence of paragraph 32 is as follows:
Power is also being taken to entitle non-resident shareholders to the tax credit under DTAs (clause 92 [now ICTA s.788(3)(d)]): the terms on which non-resident shareholders will be entitled to a tax credit in respect of a qualifying distribution under any agreement will be a matter for negotiation.
In the circumstances Mr Aaronson submitted, and I agree, that the White Paper gives little guidance as to the treatment of non-resident shareholders like Pirelli Italy/Netherlands except to say that the treatment is likely to depend on the terms of whatever DTA is negotiated between the United Kingdom and the overseas jurisdiction concerned.
ii) In any case the link between the company's payment of ACT and the shareholder's entitlement to a tax credit, though present as a policy factor to the minds of the architects of the system, is nowhere enacted as a statutory requirement. For example s.231(1), the main provision in the Act itself which confers tax credits, entitles a recipient of a distribution (typically a dividend) to a tax credit where:
a company resident in the United Kingdom makes a qualifying distribution and the person receiving the distribution is another such company or a person resident in the United Kingdom, not being a company …
There is no requirement there or anywhere else that ACT must have been paid, or at least must be payable. It is probably true that the draftsman in 1972 assumed that, in any case where a recipient of a dividend would be entitled to a tax credit under the predecessor of s.231(1), there would have been a liability on the part of the paying company, or of one or more lower tier companies, to pay ACT in amounts which would match the amount of the tax credit. Further, in all circumstances which the draftsman could realistically have anticipated at the time, his assumption would have been correct. It remains the case, however, that the policy considerations which influenced the architects of the imputation system and the assumptions which the draftsman probably made were nowhere enacted as conditions which had to be fulfilled before a shareholder could be entitled to a tax credit.
i) Pirelli SpA, an Italian resident company, had to receive dividends from Pirelli UK, a United Kingdom resident company.
It did.
ii) The dividends had to be received at a time when an individual resident in the United Kingdom was entitled in respect of dividends paid by a United Kingdom resident company: opening part of article 10(3).
They were.
iii) Pirelli SpA must have been the beneficial owner of the dividends.
It was.
iv) Pirelli SpA had to control at least 10% of the voting power in Pirelli UK.
It did.
v) Pirelli SpA had to be subject to Italian tax in respect of the Pirelli UK dividends: article 10(3)(d).
It was, or at least there is no suggestion that it was not, and I assume that in the ordinary course it was.
vi) If the foregoing conditions were satisfied, as they were, Pirelli SpA was entitled to tax credits equal to half the tax credits to which a United Kingdom resident individual would have been entitled: article 10(3)(c).
vii) Pirelli SpA was liable to United Kingdom income tax on the aggregate of the dividends and the half tax credits referred to in (vi), at a rate of 5%: article 10(3)(a)(ii).
viii) Pirelli SpA was entitled to payment from the United Kingdom of the excess of the half tax credits in (vi) over the income tax liabilities in (vii).
The Revenue's group arguments
"83 … what is contrary to Community law is … the fact that subsidiaries, resident in the United Kingdom, of parent companies having their seat in another Member State were required to pay that tax in advance whereas resident subsidiaries of resident parent companies were able to avoid that requirement."
To the same effect are the terms in which the CJEC answered one of the questions referred to it by the High Court:
"It is contrary to Article 52 of the EC Treaty (now, after amendment, Article 43 EC) for the tax legislation of a Member State, such as that in issue in the main proceedings, to afford companies resident in that Member State the possibility of benefiting from a taxation regime allowing them to pay dividends to their parent company without having to pay advance corporation tax where their parent company is also resident in that Member State but to deny them that possibility where their parent company has its seat in another Member State."
THE ATHINAIKI ISSUE
Whereas it is furthermore necessary, in order to ensure fiscal neutrality, that the profits which a subsidiary distributes to its parent company be exempt from withholding tax …
Article 1
Each Member State shall apply this Directive:
…
- to distributions of profits by companies of that State to companies of other Member States of which they are subsidiaries.
…
Article 5
1. Profits which a subsidiary distributes to its parent company shall, at least where the latter holds a minimum of 25% of the capital of the subsidiary, be exempt from withholding tax.
…
Article 7
1. The term 'withholding tax' as used in this Directive shall not cover an advance payment or prepayment (précompte) of corporation tax to the Member State of the subsidiary which is made in connection with a distribution of profits to its parent company.