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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> Comptroller of Taxes -v- Atherley [2015] JRC 114 (27 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2015/2015_114.html Cite as: [2015] JRC 114 |
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Before : |
J. A. Clyde-Smith, Esq, Commissioner, sitting alone. |
Between |
Comptroller of Taxes |
Appellant |
And |
Stephen Atherley |
Respondent |
Advocate G. G. P. White for the Appellant.
Mr Stephen Atherley appeared on his own behalf.
judgment
the commissioner:
1. This is an appeal by the Comptroller of Taxes ("the Comptroller") against a determination of the Commissioners of Appeal dated 26th November, 2014, on appeal by the respondent ("Mr Atherley") against the assessment by the Comptroller of Mr Atherley's tax for the year of assessment 2011.
2. The appeal raises a point of construction of the provisions of the Income Tax (Jersey) Law 1961 ("the Income Tax Law") as they were in 2011 and, in essence, the stage at which Mr Atherley is to be given credit for tax paid on his UK income.
3. Under Part 12 of the Income Tax Law headed "Personal Allowances and Reliefs" Article 92A provides a threshold for exemption from income tax (the amount is not relevant for these purposes) and Article 92C, misleadingly entitled "Marginal rate of tax", provides marginal relief for those whose total income exceeds that threshold:-
4. Under Part 14 of the Income Tax Law headed "Relief from double taxation", Article 111 gives effect to arrangements made with foreign governments for the relief from double taxation, the States of Jersey having entered into such an arrangement with the UK in 1952 (see the Double Taxation Relief (Arrangement with the United Kingdom)(Jersey) Act 1952):-
5. Article 112(1) and (2) then provide as follows:-
6. In the case of a taxpayer who has both Jersey and UK income, the Comptroller would assess him in this way:-
(i) Firstly by applying the standard rate of income tax (20%) to the whole of his taxable income (i.e. both Jersey and UK) which equates to Mr Atherley's taxable income less allowable deductions, and this pursuant to Article 22(1) of the Income Tax Law which is in these terms:-
As part of that process, the Comptroller would give the taxpayer credit for UK tax paid on his UK income, pursuant to Article 112.
(ii) Secondly by applying the relief under Article 92C, so that if the threshold is met the income tax payable under the assessment would be reduced.
7. Mr Atherley's case is that there is no support under these provisions for a credit for double taxation to be given at the assessment stage. In his view, it should be given after applying the relief under Article 92C because he says it is under that provision that the final liability for income tax is established.
8. Mr Atherley starts with the advantage that the Comptroller is unable to point to any express provision within the Income Tax Law which supports his approach. Mr Atherley's contentions were summarised by the Commissioners as follows:-
9. The Commissioners agreed with Mr Atherley and I set out their determination and conclusion:-
10. The actual question put to the Commissioners on Mr Atherley's appeal was whether or not his tax liability for the year of assessment 2011 was to be calculated under the provisions of Article 92A-C of the Income Tax Law-if it was then it would follow that the double taxation credit under Article 112 would be applied to the tax payable as reduced by the marginal relief that those provisions provide.
11. The Comptroller produced to the Commissioners and to me a most detailed analysis in which he examined the history of marginal relief (which came into effect after the double taxation provisions) from when it was first introduced in 1964 to what he described as the radical amendments brought in in 2007 (Income Tax (Amendment No 26)(Jersey) Law 2007 with which we are concerned and he referred to the consistent practice that he and his predecessors have taken following a decision of the Commissioners in 1989, which, whilst concerned with UK tax pension income, raised the same issue. The history is of interest by way of background but relevant for the reasons I set out below. I did not find the decision of the Commissioners in 1989 helpful in resolving the question put before me.
12. I asked Advocate White to address me on whether any presumptions arise in relation to the interpretation of a taxation statute. He referred me to Whiteman & Sherry on Income Tax (2012) which at paragraph 1.107 sets out the general principles as a matter of English law, namely that the onus is on the Crown to show that a taxing statute imposes a charge on the person sought to be taxed but once this onus has been discharged, the taxing statute must be construed strictly by reference to its actual words without regard to what might be expected to be found in it. Two passages are cited, the first from the judgment of Lord Cairns LC in Partington v Attorney General (1869-70) L.R. 4 H.L. 100:-
13. The second passage cited is that of the judgment of Rowlatt J in Cape Brands Syndicate v IRC [1921] 1K.B.64:-
14. If there is ambiguity within the taxing statute which relates to some provision which relieves the taxpayer, neither taxpayer nor the Crown is entitled to the benefit of any doubt (see Littman v Barron [1951] Ch 993 at 1003). Advocate White submitted that the correct approach to statutory construction of a taxing statute is that stated by the House of Lords in Barclays Mercantile Business Finance v Mawson [2005] AC 684 where Lord Nicholls said this at paragraph 36:-
15. Applying these principles, which I regard as helpful in this jurisdiction, it is not in dispute that Mr Atherley comes within the charging provisions of the Income Tax Law. We are concerned with the application of provisions which reduce his liability and it is therefore a question of construing Articles 92C and 112 purposefully with a view to ascertaining how they were intended to interact.
16. As the Commissioners and the Comptroller say Article 92C does not provide for an alternative rate of tax, although economically, when applied, it will have that effect. Nor does it give rise to a liability to pay tax. It provides relief from the amount of income tax assessed as being payable on a taxpayer's total income, irrespective of the source of that income. "Total income" is a defined term:-
17. Turning to the double taxation provisions, Article 112(1) sets out where the article as a whole is to have effect, namely where tax payable in respect of foreign income is to be allowed "as a credit against tax payable in respect of that income in Jersey" (my emphasis). A credit is therefore to be allowed against the tax payable on the foreign income only. Article 112(2) provides the mechanism by which the credit is to be applied - "The amount of the income tax chargeable in respect of the income shall be reduced by the amount of the credit." "The income" here means the foreign income and not the total income of the taxpayer so that this should be read as follows:-"The amount of the [Jersey] income tax chargeable in respect of the [foreign] income shall be reduced by the amount of the credit".
18. It is curious that Article 112(1) refers to the credit being allowed against the "tax payable" whereas Article 112(2) refers to the credit reducing the "income tax chargeable". Neither term is defined. By reference to the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary "payable" means "to be paid, due, falling due" and "chargeable" means "capable of being or liable to be charged". It is difficult to discern why these two different terms were used and whether there is any real difference between them but what is clear is that at the time these double taxation provisions were introduced (with the Income Tax Law in 1961) the marginal relief provisions did not exist. The draftsman can only have been referring to income tax either payable or chargeable under Article 22(1). I can discern nothing in the marginal relief provisions that were subsequently introduced to suggest that it was intended that this should change.
19. The word "credit" is also not defined and again by reference to the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary it means "an acknowledgment of payment by entry into an account" or in terms of bookkeeping "to enter on the credit side of an account". A credit can only be applied therefore to a sum due by one person to another, in this case to the sum due by the taxpayer to the Comptroller.
20. The key question therefore is under what provision does the taxpayer's liability arise, as it is only against that liability that the double taxation credit can be applied. Does it arise under the marginal relief provisions as Mr Atherley and the Commissioners would contend or under the assessment provisions as the Comptroller would contend?
21. On this key question I differ from the conclusions reached by Mr Atherley and the Commissioners. Article 92A-C does not create a liability to tax. Mr Atherley said that in practice you would apply the 20% rate of tax under Article 22 and the 27% rate of tax under Article 92A-C and whichever was the lower created the liability against which the double taxation credit would be applied. There is, however, no such thing as the 27% rate of tax. The only rate of tax is 20%, which is applied to the taxpayers taxable income under Article 22(1). It is that provision and that alone which creates the liability to tax and against which the double taxation credit is to be applied, as must have been the intention when the Income Tax Law was enacted in 1961. When subsequently introduced, Article 92A-C entitled the taxpayer to reduce that liability if the threshold was met.
22. Accordingly in addressing the question put to the Commissioners, I would say that that Mr Atherley's tax liability is not to be calculated under Article 92A-C. His tax liability is assessed under Article 22(1) and it is against that liability that the double taxation credit is to be applied. He is entitled under Article 92A-C to reduce the amount for which he is liable, should the threshold be reached.
23. I therefore allow the appeal and set aside the decision of the Commissioners.