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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Pirelli Cable Holding NV & Ors v Revenue and Customs [2007] EWHC 583 (Ch) (23 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/583.html Cite as: [2008] STC 144, [2007] EWHC 583 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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PIRELLI CABLE HOLDING NV PIRELLI SpA PIRELLI TYRE HOLDING NV PIRELLI GENERAL PLC PIRELLI UK PLC |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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COMMISSIONERS FOR HM REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Defendants |
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Mr Ian Glick QC, Mr David Ewart QC and Mr Gerry Facenna (instructed by The Acting Solicitor to the Commissioners) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 14 and 15 February 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE RIMER :
Introduction
"That the case be remitted back to Mr Justice Park in the High Court of Justice Chancery Division to decide the unresolved factual question of whether, had group income election been available to the Pirelli group, the group would have elected to have the United Kingdom subsidiaries pay the dividends in question free of ACT or, instead, would have chosen that the United Kingdom subsidiaries should pay the dividends outside group income elections, thus enabling the overseas parents to receive convention tax credits and so that in assessing the amount of compensation payable to the 4th and 5th claimants [Pirelli General and Pirelli UK] the amount of the tax credit paid to their parents should be brought into account, and to order repayment of any sums already paid by the appellants to the 4th and 5th claimants ."
Legislative background
"14.-(1) Subject to section 247, where a company resident in the United Kingdom makes a qualifying distribution it shall be liable to pay an amount of corporation tax ('advance corporation tax') in accordance with subsection (3) below."
"231.-(1) Subject to sections 95(1)(b), 247 and 441A(b), 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, the recipient of the distribution shall be entitled to a tax credit equal to such proportion of the amount or value of the distribution as corresponds to the rate of advance corporation tax in force for the financial year in which the distribution is made."
"(a) for relief from income tax, or from corporation tax in respect of income or chargeable gains; or
"(d) 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."
" 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."
Article 10 in each case also empowered the UK to charge tax on the aggregate of the dividend and the tax credit at the rate of 5%. As a matter of arithmetic this meant that Pirelli Netherlands/Italy were entitled in the relevant years to a tax credit having a net value (after the imposition of UK income tax at 5%) of 6.875% of the amount of the dividend. This is explained in paragraph 24 of Park J's judgment at an earlier stage of these proceedings (see Pirelli Cable Holding NV and Others v. Inland Revenue Commissioners [2003] EWHC 32 (Ch); [2003] STC 250) (hereafter "the Park J judgment")). It is to be noted that article 10 fixes the level of credit by reference to a proportion of the tax credit that an individual resident in the UK would have been entitled had the dividend been paid to him.
"(2) So long as an election under subsection (1) above is in force the election dividends shall be excluded from sections 14(1) and 231 and are accordingly not included in references to franked payments made by the paying company or the franked investment income of the receiving company but are in the Corporation Tax Acts referred to as 'group income' of the receiving company."
The Hoechst decision
"54. Consequently, to afford resident subsidiaries of non-resident companies the possibility of making a group income election would do no more than allow them to retain the sums which would otherwise be payable by way of advance corporation tax until such time as mainstream corporation tax falls due. They would thus enjoy the same cash flow advantage as resident subsidiaries of resident parent companies, there being no difference assuming equal bases of assessment between the amounts of mainstream corporation tax for which the two types of subsidiary are liable in respect of the same accounting period."
"The answer to the second question referred must therefore be: where a subsidiary resident in one member state has been obliged to pay advance corporation tax in respect of dividends paid to its parent company having its seat in another member state even though, in similar circumstances, the subsidiaries of parent companies resident in the first member state were entitled to opt for a taxation regime that allowed them to avoid that obligation, article 52 [now 43] of the Treaty requires that resident subsidiaries and their non-resident parent companies should have an effective legal remedy in order to obtain reimbursement or reparation of the financial loss which they have sustained and from which the authorities of the member state concerned have benefited as a result of the advanced payment of tax by the subsidiaries. The mere fact that the sole object of such an action is the payment of interest equivalent to the financial loss suffered as a result of the loss of use of the sums paid prematurely does not constitute a ground for dismissing such an action. While, in the absence of Community rules, it is for the domestic legal system of the member state concerned to lay down the detailed procedural rules governing such actions, including ancillary questions such as the payment of interest, those rules must not render practically impossible or excessively difficult the exercise of rights conferred by Community law."
The issues in the present case
"58 assumed facts are that over the whole of the relevant period a group income election would have been made by each of the three parent companies if it had been open to them to do so. This is an issue of fact yet to be resolved if it becomes necessary to resolve it."
The Park J judgment
"[28] As to whether group income elections would have been made, the case of the Pirelli claimants is that they would. The Revenue reserved their position on this for the purposes of the hearing before me. They may wish to return to the question at a later stage in the progress of the GLO, but it was agreed that, for the purposes of the hearing before me which has led to this judgment, it should be assumed (i) that elections would have been made if they had been permitted, (ii) that Pirelli UK and Pirelli General would have paid the same dividends as they actually paid, but (iii) that they would not have paid ACT."
"I have to interpret [the DTAs] as they are, and on that basis I conclude that, if the dividends which were paid by Pirelli UK to Pirelli Italy/Netherlands between 1995 and 1999 could have been paid and were paid as group income without Pirelli UK being liable for ACT, Pirelli Italy/Netherlands would still have been entitled to receive the art 10 DTA payments from the United Kingdom Revenue."
The decision of the Court of Appeal
The decision of the House of Lords
"14 That would fly in the face of the stated purpose of article 10(3)(c), namely, to entitle a Netherlands resident parent to part ('one half') of the tax credit to which a United Kingdom resident would have been entitled had he received the dividend.
15. An interpretation of article 10 having this effect would comprise such a gross and obvious departure from the evident purpose of article 10(3)(c), and from a fundamental feature of the tax credit scheme on which article 10(3)(c) is superimposed, that in my view article 10(3)(c) cannot be so read. The Netherlands Convention assumes that the dividend whose receipt attracts a Convention tax credit will also have attracted liability to ACT. That is an assumption implicit in article 10(3)(c). When interpreting article 10(3)(c) in the post-Hoechst world effect should be given to this implicit assumption. Article 10(3)(c) is not to be read as applying to election dividends."
"35. The payment of ACT was not enacted as a condition that had to be fulfilled before a shareholder could become entitled to a tax credit, as Park J [2003] STC 250, 265-266, para 36 was right to point out. But the link between these two provisions imposing the liability to ACT and giving the right to the tax credit could not have been more clearly expressed."
"39. It seems to me that there is no escape from the fact that it is section 231 that section 788(3)(d) uses to identify the relief that is to be given in accordance with the DTA by way of a relief under the domestic system to the non-resident companies. It was the domestic system, not the Treaty, that defined the extent of that relief. According to its own terms section 231 had to be read subject to section 247. And the giving of a tax credit for qualifying distributions only became necessary because qualifying distributions were distributions on the making of which the paying company was liable to ACT. Reading these two provisions together, it is clear that the prerequisite for the giving of a tax credit was the making of a qualifying distribution which was liable to ACT. A group income election extinguished that liability and with it the right to the tax credit that was the counterpart of the liability. It follows that, if the same system had been available to them and a group election had been made, no ACT would have been payable on the distributions to the EU parent companies. So there would have been no entitlement to a tax credit with respect to those distributions under section 788(3)(d). ."
"71. Article 10 in express terms hinged a Netherlands/Italy parent company's right to a tax credit to the entitlement that a UK-resident individual would have had to a tax credit it he had received the dividends that that foreign parent company had received. That being so I do not, for my part, find it at all surprising that specific provisions in domestic legislation restricting in specified circumstances the right to a tax credit should govern the availability of a tax credit under article 10. Be that as it may, the only tax credit available, at least in this area of tax law, is a tax credit under section 231. There is no such thing as an article 10(3)(c) tax credit that is not a 'tax credit under section 231'."
"103. But in the end I have come to the conclusion, differing most reluctantly from the courts below, that they reached the wrong conclusion because they did not give enough weight to two factors. One is that in applying the DTAs it is necessary to look, not only at their terms, but also at the language of section 788(3)(d), which uses a technical expression of domestic law, 'qualifying distribution'. The other is that the clear scheme of the 1988 Act is that the payment of a dividend should be accompanied by a payment of ACT if a tax credit is to come into existence, and if exceptionally (because of a GIE) the payment of a dividend is not accompanied by a payment of ACT, the dividend would not give rise to a tax credit, because of section 247(2). Section 247(2) does not directly affect the meaning of 'tax credit', but it does to my mind affect the meaning of 'qualifying distribution'; a dividend paid under a GIE is in terms excluded from section 14(1), and section 231 is in terms made to take effect subject to section 247."
Abuse of process
"But Henderson v. Henderson abuse of process, as now understood, although separate and distinct from cause of action estoppel and issue estoppel, has much in common with them. The underlying public interest is the same: that there should be finality in litigation and that a party should not be twice vexed in the same matter. This public interest is reinforced by the current emphasis on efficiency and economy in the conduct of litigation, in the interests of the parties and the public as a whole. The bringing of a claim or the raising of a defence in later proceedings may, without more, amount to abuse if the court is satisfied (the onus being on the party alleging abuse) that the claim or defence should have been raised in the earlier proceedings if it was to be raised at all. I would not accept that it is necessary, before abuse may be found, to identify any additional element such as a collateral attack on a previous decision or some dishonesty, but where those elements are present the later proceedings will be much more obviously abusive, and there will rarely be a finding of abuse unless the later proceeding involves what the court regards as unjust harassment of a party. It is, however, wrong to hold that because a matter could have been raised in earlier proceedings it should have been, so as to render the raising of it in later proceedings necessarily abusive. That is to adopt too dogmatic an approach to what should in my opinion be a broad, merits-based judgment which takes account of the public and private interests involved and also takes account of all the facts of the case, focusing attention on the crucial question of whether, in all the circumstances, a party is misusing or abusing the process of the court by seeking to raise before it the issue which could have been raised before. As one cannot comprehensively list all possible forms of abuse, so one cannot formulate any hard and fast rule to determine whether, on given facts, abuse is to be found or not. Thus while I would accept that lack of funds would not ordinarily excuse a failure to raise in earlier proceedings an issue which could and should have been raised then, I would not regard it as necessarily irrelevant, particularly if it appears that the lack of funds has been caused by the party against whom it is sought to claim. While the result may often be the same, it is in my view preferable to ask whether in all the circumstances a party's conduct is an abuse rather than to ask whether the conduct is an abuse and then, if it is, to ask whether the abuse is excused or justified by special circumstances. Properly applied, and whatever the legitimacy of its descent, the rule has in my view a valuable part to play in protecting the interests of justice."
The claim to a tax credit on the payment of MCT
" whether Articles 43 EC and 56 EC, and/or Articles 4(1) and 6 of Directive 90/435 must be interpreted as meaning that they preclude national legislation such as that at issue in the main proceedings which, in granting a tax credit to a resident company receiving dividends from another resident company by reference to the ACT paid by the latter in respect of the distribution, allows the former company to pay dividends to its own shareholders without being obliged to account for the ACT, whereas a resident company which has received dividends from a non-resident company must, in a similar case, pay the ACT in full."
"87. Contrary to what the United Kingdom Government contends, a company receiving foreign-sourced dividends is, seen in the light of the objective of preventing the imposition of a series of charges to tax which the legislation at issue in the main proceedings seeks to avoid, in a comparable situation to that of a company receiving nationally-sourced dividends, even though only the latter receives dividends on which ACT has been paid.
88. As the Advocate General states in points 65 to 68 of his Opinion, the ACT payable by a United Kingdom-resident company is nothing more than a payment of corporation tax in advance, even though it is levied in advance when dividends are paid and calculated by reference to the amount of those dividends. The ACT which is paid on a distribution by way of dividend may, in principle, be set off against the corporation tax which a company must pay on its profits for the corresponding accounting period. Likewise, as the Court held when it ruled on the group income scheme established under the same tax legislation which was in force in the United Kingdom, the proportion of corporation tax which a resident company need not pay in advance under such a scheme when paying dividends to its parent company is, in principle, paid when the liability of the first company to corporation tax falls due (see Metalgesellshaft and Others, paragraph 53).
89. In the case of companies which, because their seat is outside the United Kingdom, are not obliged to pay ACT when they pay dividends to a resident company, it is clear that they are also liable to corporation tax in the State in which they are resident.
90. That being the case, the fact that a non-resident company has not been required to pay ACT when paying dividends to a resident company cannot be relied on in order to refuse that company the opportunity to reduce the amount of ACT which it is obliged to pay on a subsequent distribution by way of dividend. The reason why such a non-resident company is not liable to ACT is that it is subject to corporation tax, not in the United Kingdom, but in the State in which it is resident. A company cannot be required to pay in advance a tax to which it will never be liable (see, to that effect, Metalgesellshaft and Others, paragraphs 55 and 56).
91. Since both resident companies distributing dividends to other resident companies and non-resident companies making such a distribution are subject, in the State in which they are resident, to corporation tax, a national measure which is designed to avoid a series of charges to tax on distributed profits only as regards companies receiving dividends from other resident companies, while exposing companies receiving dividends from non-resident companies to a cash-flow disadvantage, cannot be justified by a relevant difference in the situation of those companies .
94. It follows that Article 43 EC precludes a national measure which allows a resident company which has received dividends from another resident company to deduct the amount of ACT paid by the latter company from the amount of ACT for which the former company is liable, whereas a resident company which has received dividends from a non-resident company is not entitled to make such a deduction in respect of the corporation tax which the lastmentioned company is obliged to pay in the State in which it is resident."
"158. As regards the fact that shareholders are not entitled to a tax credit under the FID regime, the United Kingdom Government argues that such a tax credit is granted to a shareholder receiving a distribution only where there is economic double taxation of the profits distributed which must be prevented or mitigated. That does not apply to the FID regime inasmuch as, first, no ACT has been accounted for on foreign-sourced dividends and, secondly, the ACT which the resident company receiving those dividends must account for on making a distribution to its shareholders is subsequently repaid.
159. However, that argument is based on the same false premiss that a risk of economic double taxation arises only in the case of dividends paid by a resident company subject to an obligation to account for ACT on dividends distributed by it, whereas the true position is that such a risk also exists in the case of dividends paid by a non-resident company, the profits of which are also subject to corporation tax in the State in which it is resident, at the rates and according to the rules applying there."
"60. it is usually the Member State in which the latter is resident that is best placed to determine that shareholder's ability to pay tax.... Likewise, in the case of shareholdings to which Directive 90/435 applies, Article 4(1) of that directive requires the Member State of the parent company which receives profits distributed by a subsidiary which is resident in another Member State, and not the latter State, to avoid a series of charges to tax, either by refraining from taxing such profits or by taxing such profits while authorising that parent company to deduct from the amount of tax due that fraction of the corporation tax paid by the subsidiary which relates to those profits and, if appropriate, the amount of the withholding tax levied by the Member State in which the subsidiary is resident."
" obliged, in accordance with the principle laid down in Lenz and Manninen referred to in paragraph 55 of this judgment, to ensure that dividends received by those shareholders from a non-resident company are subject to the same tax treatment as that which applies to dividends received by a resident shareholder from a resident company."
"70. If the Member State of residence of the company making distributable profits decides to exercise its taxing powers not only in relation to profits made in that State but also in relation to income arising in that State and paid to non-resident companies receiving dividends, it is solely because of the exercise by that State of its taxing powers that, irrespective of any taxation in another Member State, a risk of a series of charges to tax may arise. In such a case, in order for non-resident companies receiving dividends not to be subject to a restriction on freedom of establishment prohibited, in principle, by Article 43 EC, the State in which the company making the distribution is resident is obliged to ensure that, under the procedures laid down by its national law in order to prevent or mitigate a series of liabilities to tax, non-resident shareholder companies are subject to the same treatment as resident shareholder companies.
71. It is for the national court to determine, in each case, whether that obligation has been complied with, taking account, where necessary, of the provision of the DTC that that Member State has concluded with the State in which the shareholder company is resident (see, to that effect, Case C-265/04 Bouanich [2006] ECR I-923, paragraphs 51 to 55).
72. It follows that legislation of a Member State which, on a payment of dividends by a resident company where no DTC is involved, grants a tax credit equal to the fraction of the advance corporation tax paid by the company making the distributed profits only to resident companies receiving the dividends and which extends the benefit of that tax credit exclusively to resident ultimate shareholders, does not constitute discrimination prohibited by Article 43 EC.
74. The answer to Question 1(a) must therefore be that Articles 43 EC and 56 EC do not prevent a Member State, on a distribution of dividends to a company resident in that State, from granting companies receiving those dividends which are also resident in that State a tax credit equal to the fraction of the corporation tax paid on the distributed profits by the company making the distribution, when it does not grant such a tax credit to companies receiving such dividends which are resident in another Member State and are not subject to tax on dividends in the first State."
"69. A further application of the source State non-discrimination obligation is that, insofar as a source State chooses to relieve domestic economic double taxation for its residents (for example, in taxation of dividends), it must extend this relief to non-residents to the extent that similar domestic double economic taxation results from the exercise of its tax jurisdiction over these non-residents (for example, where the source State subjects company profits first to corporation tax and then to income tax upon distribution). This follows from the principle that tax benefits granted by the source State to non-residents should equal those granted to residents insofar as the source State otherwise exercises equal tax jurisdiction over both groups.
88. In this regard, I would repeat that, as I explained above, the nature of the UK's obligation, acting as source State as regards outgoing dividends, is, insofar as it exercises tax jurisdiction over non-residents' income, to treat it in a comparable way to residents' income. In other terms, to the extent that the UK exercises jurisdiction to levy UK income tax on dividends distributed to non-residents, it must ensure that these non-residents receive equivalent treatment including tax benefits as residents subject to the same UK income tax jurisdiction would receive. Put otherwise, the extent of the UK's obligation should respect the division of jurisdiction and tax base arrived at in the applicable bilateral DTC. As held by the Court in Bouanich, it is for the national court to decide, in each case and depending on the terms of the relevant DTC, whether this obligation has been complied with.
91. For these reasons, the answer to Question 1(a) should be that where, under legislation such as that at issue in the present case, the UK grants a full tax credit for dividends paid by UK-resident companies to UK-resident individual shareholders, it is not required by Article 43 or 56 EC to extend a full or partial tax credit to outgoing dividends paid by a UK-resident subsidiary to a non-UK resident parent company where these dividends are not subject to UK income tax. However, to the extent that, pursuant to a DTC, the UK exercises jurisdiction to levy UK income tax on dividends distributed to non-residents, it must ensure that these non-residents receive equivalent treatment including tax benefits as residents subject to the same income tax jurisdiction would receive."
"71. the only tax credit available, at least in this area of tax law, is a tax credit under section 231. There is no such thing as an article 10(3)(c) tax credit that is not a 'tax credit under section 231'."
All their Lordships agreed with Lord Scott's speech, and there can now be no doubt, that a section 231 tax credit is exclusively linked to the payment of ACT under section 14(1). So, as a matter of domestic law, it is plain that upon the hypothetical exercise of a group income election Pirelli Netherlands/Italy would not, upon the subsequent payment by Pirelli UK of its MCT, have become entitled to any tax credit at all. As no credit would have been payable, no UK tax would have been payable on the dividend paid to Pirelli Netherlands/Italy, since such tax is only payable in circumstances in which the foreign parent does receive a tax credit (section 233(1)). The result of all that is: no tax credit, therefore no tax on the dividend, therefore no economic double taxation imposed by UK law, therefore no "risk of a series of charges to tax", therefore no duty to relieve against it, therefore no entitlement to a tax credit. Community law only requires the UK to provide a credit by way of such relief in circumstances in which it has itself imposed a liability to tax on the dividend - and therefore an exposure by such liability to economic double taxation - but under UK law there was no such liability unless Pirelli has first become entitled a credit. Pirelli's problem in this litigation is that it appears reluctant to accept that the House of Lords has decided that it is not entitled to one. As Mr Glick put it, Mr Aaronson's argument amounted to no more than the assertion that Pirelli must be entitled to the claimed credit because it must be entitled to it.