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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Customs & Excise v Jacobs [2004] EWHC 2358 (Ch) (22 October 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/2358.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2358 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE VAT & DUTIES TRIBUNAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
COMMISSIONERS OF CUSTOMS AND EXCISE |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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IVOR MARK JACOBS |
Respondent |
____________________
Richard Barlow (instructed by Cooper Parry) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 12th Oct 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr. Justice Evans-Lombe :
The Relevant Statutory Provisions
"35 Refund of VAT to persons constructing certain buildings
(1) Where
(a) a person carries out works to which this section applies
(b) his carrying out of the works is lawful and otherwise than in the course or furtherance of any business, and,
(c) VAT is chargeable on the supply, acquisition or importation of any goods used by him for the purposes of the works,
the Commissioners shall, on a claim made in that behalf, refund to that person the amount of VAT so chargeable.
(1A) The works to which this section applies are-
(a)
(b)
(c) a residential conversion.
(1D) For the purpose of this section works constitute a residential conversion to the extent that they consist in the conversion of a non-residential building, or a non-residential part of a building, into
(a) a building designed as a dwelling or a number of dwellings;
(b) a building intended for use solely for a relevant residential purpose; or
(c) anything which would fall within paragraph (a) or (b) above if different parts of the building were treated as separate buildings .
(4) The notes to Group 5 of schedule 8 shall apply for construing this section as they apply for construing that Group."
"(2) A building is designed as a dwelling or a number of dwellings where in relation to each dwelling the following conditions are satisfied-
(a) the dwelling consists of self-contained living accommodation;
(b) there is no provision for direct internal access from the dwelling to any other dwelling or part of a dwelling;
(c) the separate use or disposal of the dwelling is not prohibited by the terms of any covenant, statutory planning consent or similar provisions, and
(d) statutory planning consent has been granted in respect of that dwelling and its construction or conversion has been carried out in accordance with that consent.
At note (4) appears a definition of "relevant residential purpose" as follows:-
(4) Use for a relevant residential purpose means use as
(a) a home or other institution providing residential accommodation for children;
(b)
(c)
(d) residential accommodation for students or school pupils;
(e)
(f)
(g) an institution which is the sole or main residence of at least 90% of its residents; ."
"(7) Subject to Note (9) "non-residential" in relation to a building or part of a building, means-
(a) neither designed nor adapted for use as a dwelling or number of dwellings or for a relevant residential purpose; or
(b) "
"(9) The conversion, other than to a building designed for a relevant residential purpose, of a non-residential part of a building which already contains a residential part is not included within items 1(b) unless the result of that conversion is to create an additional dwelling or dwellings."
"10 The inclusion of item 1of Group 5 in schedule 8 to the 1994 Act so making the first grant by a person of a major interest in a building which has been constructed for, or converted to, residential use a taxable supply (albeit zero-rated) - enables a developer who is a taxable person (and who is making such supply in the course or furtherance of his business) to recover as input tax the VAT charged on supplies to him of goods and services. But that, of course, is of no assistance to a person who is carrying out comparable works, but who is not doing so in the course of a business and who (usually) will not be a taxable person. Such a person cannot take advantage of the provisions for the recovery of input tax which are contained in section 25 of the 1994 Act. It is to relieve such a person a person "carrying out works otherwise than in the course or furtherance of any business" - of the burden of the VAT charged on supplies to him of goods and services that section 35 has been enacted. That section enables a person who (if he were carrying out the works in the course of a business) would be able to take advantage of the provisions for the recovery, as input tax, of the VAT chargeable on the supply to him of goods and services, but who cannot do so (because he is carrying out those works otherwise than in the course of a business), to claim a refund of the VAT element of monies paid to his suppliers."
"21 These examples show that it cannot have been intended for the statute to operate in that way if there is an easier way. In my judgment there plainly is. The references in section 35(1D) are designed to ensure that if a mixed use building is converted, provided a dwelling house emerges, then relief will be obtained in respect of that part of the building which is converted to a dwelling house use, which was formally not used for residential purposes. Thus in the present case the respondent obtains relief for those parts of the works which were carried out on the non-residential part."
"16 On appeal to the High Court, the Commissioners challenged the tribunal's decision on two grounds: first, that the requirements in section 35(1D) are not satisfied unless the effect of the works is that the non-residential part is, itself, converted into a dwelling; second, that (in any event) note (9) to Group 5, of schedule 8, requires that the result of the conversion must be to create an additional building.
17 The judge rejected the first of those contentions. He held that it was enough if the building had comprised a non-residential part which was the subject of conversion works; provided that, after conversion, the building (taken as whole) was a building designed as a dwelling. As he put it, such a case fell plainly within paragraph (a) of section 35(1D); but "If there was any doubt, the case would fall plainly within paragraph (c)." Although the judge's conclusion on that point was challenged in the appellants' notice as filed, that challenge was not pursued at the hearing. It was accepted by counsel for the Commissioners in this Court that the appeal could not succeed unless note (9) to Group 5 of schedule 8, to the 1994 Act could be invoked."
"12 It is important to have in mind: (i) that Group 5 of schedule 8 to the 1994 Act is to be construed in accordance with the notes contained in schedule 8 section 96(9) and, in particular, in accordance with the notes to Group 5 itself; and (ii) that section 35(4) requires that the notes to Group 5 of schedule 8, apply for construing section 35 'as they apply for construing that Group'."
" In the light of that note, it is beyond argument as it seems to me that, if the conversion in the present case had been carried out by a developer in the course of a business (so that Group 5 was directly in point), the conversion would not fall within item 1(b). The result of the conversion has not been to create an additional dwelling."
The Tribunal's decision
"Because the children boarded, residential accommodation was provided for them but the provision of such accommodation does not render Hopwell Hall itself "residential accommodation". [By using " " the Tribunal were, in my judgment, intending a technical meaning to residential in the context of Note (7)] We accept Mr Barlow's contention and find that the building was first and foremost a school and that the residential accommodation served as a secondary function to accommodate the children who were being educated there. Put another way the purpose of the totality of the building, or the use to which it was put, was to educate the children and to accommodate them and such of the supervisory staff as were necessary whilst they were being educated. The building was not therefore as a whole residential accommodation but included within it was an element of such. Those parts which we would class as residential were the dormitories or the bedrooms the staff bed-sits bathrooms and toilet facilities, kitchen, dining room and laundry."
"In this context we take the word dwelling to have its ordinary every day meaning and it would contain such facilities as would be required to carry out the "major activities of life, particularly sleeping, cooking and feeding plus toilet facilities" on this basis the staff bed-sits were clearly not dwellings and so we find. The plans indicate that they contained a washbasin but there was no further evidence of any description that they contained any facility beyond that in particular no WC or cooking facility."
"47 The question then becomes whether that which had been converted i.e. the entire original building- was non-residential. "Non- residential" is defined by note (7). The building must neither have been designed or adapted as a dwelling nor for a relevant residential purpose. The wording of note (7) quite clearly refers back to the precise wording of section 35(1D). It is the building or part building out of which the dwelling is created which, as an entity, has to be non-residential. Miss Graham Wells' [solicitor for the Commissioners at the Tribunal] contention in her original submission was first that Hopwell Hall had to be taken as a whole and secondly that taken as a whole Hopwell Hall was not a non-residential building because the whole building was used for a relevant residential purpose pursuant to either note 4(g) or note 4(d). We have already found as a fact that Hopwell Hall did not fall within either category and was not therefore adapted or designed for a relevant residential purpose. The Commissioners have never contended that the building was designed as a dwelling which, despite the headmaster's flat in one corner of one wing, it clearly was not. There were, as we have found, elements of the building which would have been residential but we are considering the building in its entirety because it is the entire building to which the works of conversion were carried out. What was converted was a building which was primarily a school, and the headmaster's residence and the boys residential accommodation was ancillary to that main purpose. The residential accommodation within the school was a functional and necessary adjunct to the main purpose of the school. We therefore find that Hopwell Hall was, before conversion a non-residential building."