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IMPORTANT LEGAL NOTICE - The source of this judgment is the web site of the Court of Justice of the European Communities. The information in this database has been provided free of charge and is subject to a Court of Justice of the European Communities disclaimer and a copyright notice. This electronic version is not authentic and is subject to amendment.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT (Fifth Chamber)
14 July 1998 (1)
(Sixth VAT Directive - Scope - Foreign exchange transactions)
In Case C-172/96,
REFERENCE to the Court under Article 177 of the EC Treaty by the High Court
of Justice of England and Wales, Queen's Bench Division, for a preliminary ruling
in the proceedings pending before that court between
The Commissioners of Customs and Excise
and
First National Bank of Chicago
on the interpretation of Sixth Council Directive 77/388/EEC of 17 May 1977 on the
harmonisation of the laws of the Member States relating to turnover taxes -
Common system of value added tax: uniform basis of assessment (OJ 1977 L 145,
p. 1),
THE COURT (Fifth Chamber),
composed of: C. Gulmann, President of the Chamber, M. Wathelet, J.C. Moitinho
de Almeida, P. Jann and L. Sevón (Rapporteur), Judges,
Advocate General: C.O. Lenz,
Registrar: H.A. Rühl, Principal Administrator,
after considering the written observations submitted on behalf of:
- First National Bank of Chicago, by Paul Lasok QC,
- the United Kingdom Government, by Stephanie Ridley, of the Treasury
Solicitor's Department, acting as Agent, Nigel Pleming QC and Christopher
Vajda, Barrister,
- the French Government, by Catherine de Salins, Deputy Director in the
Legal Affairs Directorate of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Gautier
Mignot, Foreign Affairs Secretary in that Directorate, acting as Agents,
- the Commission of the European Communities, by Peter Oliver and Enrico
Traversa, of its Legal Service, acting as Agents,
having regard to the Report for the Hearing,
after hearing the oral observations of First National Bank of Chicago, represented
by David Goy QC; the United Kingdom Government, represented by John E.
Collins, Assistant Treasury Solicitor, acting as Agent, Nigel Pleming and
Christopher Vajda; and the Commission, represented by Peter Oliver, at the
hearing on 25 June 1997,
after hearing the Opinion of the Advocate General at the sitting on 16 September
1997,
gives the following
Judgment
- By order of 13 May 1996, received at the Court on 20 May 1996, the High Court
of Justice, Queen's Bench Division, referred for a preliminary ruling under Article
177 of the EC Treaty two questions on the interpretation of Sixth Council Directive
77/388/EEC of 17 May 1977 on the harmonisation of the laws of the Member
States relating to turnover taxes - Common system of value added tax: uniform
basis of assessment (OJ 1977 L 145, p. 1, hereinafter 'the Sixth Directive').
- Those questions have been raised in proceedings between First National Bank of
Chicago ('the Bank') and the Commissioners of Customs and Excise ('the
Commissioners') concerning deduction of input tax on certain foreign exchange
transactions.
- Article 2 of the Sixth Directive provides as follows:
'The following shall be subject to value added tax:
1. the supply of goods or services effected for consideration within the territory
of the country by a taxable person acting as such;
2. the importation of goods.'
- Article 5(1) defines the supply of goods in these terms:
'1. "Supply of goods" shall mean the transfer of the right to dispose of tangible
property as owner.'
- The supply of services is defined in Article 6(1) as follows:
'1. "Supply of services" shall mean any transaction which does not constitute
a supply of goods within the meaning of Article 5.'
- Article 11A(1)(a) is worded as follows:
'The taxable amount shall be:
(a) in respect of supplies of goods and services other than those referred to in
(b), (c) and (d) below, everything which constitutes the consideration which
has been or is to be obtained by the supplier from the purchaser, the
customer or a third party for such supplies including subsidies directly linked
to the price of such supplies'.
- Article 13B(d)(4) provides as follows:
'Without prejudice to other Community provisions, Member States shall exempt
the following under conditions which they shall lay down for the purpose of
ensuring the correct and straightforward application of the exemptions and of
preventing any possible evasion, avoidance or abuse:
...
(d) the following transactions:
...
4. transactions, including negotiation, concerning currency, bank notes
and coins used as legal tender, with the exception of collectors' items;
"collectors' items" shall be taken to mean gold, silver or other metal
coins or bank notes which are not normally used as legal tender or
coins of numismatic interest.'
- Article 13C(b), however, makes it possible for Member States to allow their
taxpayers a right of option for taxation in respect of the transactions covered by,
inter alia, Article 13B(d).
- Article 17(3)(c) of the Sixth Directive provides as follows:
'3. Member States shall also grant to every taxable person the right to a
deduction or refund of the value added tax referred to in paragraph 2 in so far as
the goods and services are used for the purposes of:
...
(c) any of the transactions exempted under Article 13B(a) and (d), paragraphs
1 to 5, when the customer is established outside the Community or when
these transactions are directly linked with goods intended to be exported to
a country outside the Community.'
- According to the order for reference, the Bank is registered for value added tax
('VAT') in the United Kingdom and carries on a wide range of banking activities,
including foreign exchange dealing. It is a market maker, being at all times willing
to provide and receive those currencies in which it specialises.
- The Bank quotes prices at which it is willing to trade in currencies as 'bid' or
'offer' prices. At any one specific time it will bid, that is to say offer to buy a
currency, at one price expressed as a rate of exchange and at the same time will
offer to sell the currency in the same denomination and the same amount at a
slightly higher price expressed as a rate of exchange, the difference between the
two prices being known as 'the spread'.
- Foreign exchange transactions consist of either 'spot' or 'forward' transactions.
A spot transaction is the purchase of one currency against the sale of another
currency, with the delivery and sale normally being completed on the second
subsequent business day, which is known as the settlement date or value date. A
forward transaction differs from a spot transaction in that the delivery and sale of
currencies are completed only on a future value date, the amounts, however, being
fixed by reference to the rates of exchange agreed on the deal date.
- The national court points out that no money is delivered physically in the form of
coin, note or other chattel in the foreign exchange transactions entered into by the
Bank. What is delivered is the availability of drawing on an account opened with
a bank in the currency 'delivered'.
- No transaction fee or commission is charged for or invoiced by the Bank for the
transactions at issue in the main proceedings. The Bank seeks to make a profit out
of its foreign exchange dealings as a result of the spread between its bid and offer
quotes. Each of its traders will have his or her book of particular currencies and
will be expected to make a profit over appropriate periods. This profit is a result
of all of their dealings over a particular period.
- The Bank is partly exempt for VAT purposes. It does, however, have the right to
deduct input tax corresponding to transactions completed with counterparties
established outside the Community. In order to determine the deductible amount,
the Bank has agreed with the Commissioners a special partial exemption method
under Regulation 31 of the Value Added Tax (General) Regulations 1985 (SI 1985
No 886). The recoverable proportion of input tax which the agreed method
allocates to the Bank is determined by reference to the number of foreign exchange
transactions carried out as represented by the fraction in which the numerator is
the number of transactions with counterparties outside the European Union and
the denominator is the total number of transactions.
- In its return for the period from 1 May 1994 to 31 July 1994, which included its
annual adjustment for the period from April 1993 to April 1994, the Bank took into
account, in determining the numerator and denominator of the relevant fraction,
the foreign exchange transactions into which it had entered over the period from
April 1993 to July 1994. It calculated that the input tax credit to which it was
entitled over that extended 15-month period attributable to foreign exchange
transactions with counterparties established in countries outside the Community
amounted to £251 454.90.
- By decision of 26 September 1994, the Commissioners reduced the input tax credit
which the Bank was claiming by disallowing the portion corresponding to the
foreign exchange transactions concluded with those counterparties.
- The Bank appealed to the Value Added Tax Tribunal. The appeal was heard on
the agreed limited issue of whether or not the relevant foreign exchange
transactions were supplies of services or goods for VAT purposes. By a decision
of 12 September 1995, the Value Added Tax Tribunal allowed that appeal.
- The Commissioners appealed to the High Court of Justice against that decision.
- Taking the view that resolution of the case depended on an interpretation of the
Sixth Directive, the High Court of Justice decided to stay proceedings and refer the
following questions to the Court:
'On the proper interpretation of Council Directive 77/388 of 17 May 1977 on the
harmonisation of the laws of the Member States relating to turnover tax (the Sixth
VAT Directive)
and in relation to transactions of foreign exchange as defined by the British
Bankers' Association (as set out at paragraph 1 of the Findings of Fact)
1. Do such foreign exchange transactions constitute the supply of goods or
services effected for consideration?
2. If there has been a supply of goods or services effected for consideration,
what is the nature of the consideration in relation to such transaction?'
- The definition referred to in the question reads as follows:
Foreign exchange transactions are 'transactions between parties for the purchase
by one party of an agreed amount in one currency against the sale by it to the
other of an agreed amount in another currency, both such amounts being
deliverable on the same value date, and in respect of which transactions the parties
have agreed (whether orally, electronically or in writing) the currencies involved,
the amounts of such currencies to be purchased and sold, which party will purchase
which currency and the value date'.
The first question
- By its first question, the High Court of Justice is asking essentially whether
transactions between parties for the purchase by one party of an agreed amount
in one currency against the sale by it to the other party of an agreed amount in
another currency, both such amounts being deliverable on the same value date, and
in respect of which transactions the parties have agreed (whether orally,
electronically or in writing) the currencies involved, the amounts of such currencies
to be purchased and sold, which party will purchase which currency and the value
date, constitute supplies of goods or services effected for consideration within the
meaning of Article 2(1) of the Sixth Directive.
- The Bank, the French Government and the Commission take the view that foreign
exchange transactions constitute supplies of services. Since they are effected for
consideration, they come within the Sixth Directive.
- The United Kingdom Government, on the other hand, considers that, in the
absence of consideration, a foreign exchange transaction entered into without the
charging of a commission or a fee does not constitute a supply of goods or services
for consideration within the meaning of the Sixth Directive but is simply the
exchange of one means of payment for another.
- On this question, the Court observes first of all that the currencies which are
exchanged against other currencies in a foreign exchange transaction cannot be
regarded as 'tangible property' within the meaning of Article 5 of the Sixth
Directive, since money used as legal tender is involved. Foreign exchange
transactions are thus supplies of services within the meaning of Article 6 of the
Sixth Directive.
- With regard, second, to the question whether services are supplied for
consideration, the Court has already held that a supply of services is effected 'for
consideration' within the meaning of Article 2(1) of the Sixth Directive, and is
therefore taxable, only if there is a legal relationship between the provider of the
service and the recipient pursuant to which there is reciprocal performance, the
remuneration received by the provider of the service constituting the value actually
given in return for the service supplied to the recipient (Case C-16/93 Tolsma v
Inspecteur der Omzetbelasting [1994] ECR I-743, paragraph 14).
- Only where a person's activity consists exclusively in providing services for no direct
consideration is there no basis of assessment and the services are therefore not
subject to VAT (Tolsma, cited above, paragraph 12).
- In the present case, it cannot be disputed that a bilateral legal relationship exists
between the Bank and its counterparty under which the two parties to the
transaction give reciprocal undertakings to transfer amounts in a given currency and
to receive the countervalue in another currency.
- Apart from the actual exchange transaction, the service provided by the Bank is
characterised by the Bank's preparedness to conclude such transactions in the
currencies in which it specialises.
- From the mere fact that no fees or commission are charged by the Bank upon a
specific foreign exchange transaction it does not follow that no consideration is
given.
- Moreover, any technical difficulties which exist in determining the amount of
consideration cannot by themselves justify the conclusion that no consideration
exists.
- In addition, it is apparent from the case-file that the rates at which the Bank is
prepared to sell or purchase currencies are different and are separated by a spread.
The conclusion must therefore be that, in return for the service which it provides,
the Bank takes for itself a consideration which it includes in the calculation of those
rates.
- To hold that currency transactions are taxable only when effected in return for
payment of a commission or specific fees, which would thus allow a trader to avoid
taxation if he sought to be remunerated for his services by providing for a spread
between the proposed transaction rates rather than by charging such sums, would
be a solution incompatible with the system put in place by the Sixth Directive and
would be liable to place traders on an unequal footing for purposes of taxation.
- It must therefore be held that foreign exchange transactions, performed even
without commission or direct fees, are supplies of services provided in return for
consideration, that is to say supplies of services effected for consideration within the
meaning of Article 2(1) of the Sixth Directive.
- The answer to be given to the first question must therefore be that transactions
between parties for the purchase by one party of an agreed amount in one currency
against the sale by it to the other party of an agreed amount in another currency,
both such amounts being deliverable on the same value date, and in respect of
which transactions the parties have agreed (whether orally, electronically or in
writing) the currencies involved, the amounts of such currencies to be purchased
and sold, which party will purchase which currency and the value date, constitute
supplies of services effected for consideration within the meaning of Article 2(1)
of the Sixth Directive.
The second question
- By its second question, the High Court of Justice essentially seeks to ascertain the
precise nature of the consideration. The question must therefore be understood
as seeking to determine the taxable amount.
- The Bank submits that the consideration is everything which is received in the
course of foreign exchange transactions, that is to say the turnover representing the
total value of the currencies supplied in the course of foreign exchange transactions.
- The Commission and the French Government, on the other hand, take the view
that the consideration is the amount of exchange profit realised and the other
remuneration obtained by the supplier.
- The Commission points out that it had prepared a proposal for a directive
containing a provision specifically relating to foreign exchange transactions
(Proposal for a 19th Council Directive on the harmonisation of the laws of the
Member States relating to turnover taxes, amending Directive 77/388/EEC -
common system of value added tax (COM(84) 648 final (OJ 1984 C 347, p. 5)).
The proposed amendment would have added the following sentences to the second
indent of Article 19(1):
'The amount to be included in the denominator shall be reduced by the purchase
price of transfers of currency and securities exempted pursuant to Article 13B(d)
(4) and (5); this amount shall include, where appropriate, commission and expenses
incurred by the purchaser. Where the taxable person cannot determine the
purchase price he may substitute therefor the purchase price of currency or
securities acquired during the same period, provided those currencies or securities
are identical with those sold.'
- The Commission explains that it withdrew this proposal for reasons unconnected
with that provision.
- The United Kingdom Government considers that, should the Court take the view
that the foreign exchange transactions at issue are a service provided for
consideration, any valuation based on the spread between the bid and the offer
prices would be incorrect for two reasons. First, the Bank does not charge any
customer that spread. Second, such valuation would be tantamount to levying VAT
on profit rather than turnover. The United Kingdom Government also submits that
it is impossible to identify any consideration in foreign exchange transactions, since
the profits or receipts of the Bank arise from its participation in a series of
transactions, all at different exchange rates, and not from profit on any individual
transaction. Finally, the currencies exchanged do not constitute consideration one
for the other.
- It should be borne in mind that Article 11A(1)(a) of the Sixth Directive provides
that the taxable amount is, in respect of supplies of services, that which constitutes
the consideration which has been or is to be obtained by the supplier from the
purchaser for such supplies.
- While they are the subject of a supply, the currencies transferred to a trader by his
counterparty in the course of a foreign exchange transaction cannot be regarded
as constituting remuneration for the service of exchanging currencies for other
currencies or consequently as constituting consideration for that service.
- Determining the consideration therefore comes down to determining what the Bank
receives for foreign exchange transactions, that is to say the remuneration on
foreign exchange transactions which it can actually take for itself (see, in this
regard, Case C-38/93 Glawe v Finanzamt Hamburg-Barmbek-Uhlenhorst [1994] ECR I-1679, paragraph 9).
- In this regard, the spread representing the difference between the bid price and the
offer price is only the notional price which the Bank would obtain if it were to
conclude, at the same instant and on similar conditions, two corresponding
purchase and sale transactions for the same amounts and the same currencies.
- However, these are simply theoretical considerations, since the Bank carries out a
large number of transactions relating to different amounts and involving different
currencies, the rates of which are in constant fluctuation. A trader cannot normally
foresee, when concluding one particular transaction, at what moment and at what
price he may subsequently effect one or more transactions enabling him to
eliminate or fix, at a specific amount, the risk of a change in rate to which he is
exposed following the first transaction.
- So, the consideration, that is to say the amount which the Bank can actually apply
to its own use, must be regarded as consisting of the net result of its transactions
over a given period of time.
- It should be borne in mind in this regard that, in the case of transactions which are
effected for consideration but the actual consideration for which depends on future
factors such as passage of time, the Court has already ruled that the taxable
amount must be defined on the basis of, in particular, the interest accrued over a
deferred payment period, which was not yet known when the taxable transaction
was concluded (Case C-281/91 Muys' en De Winter's Bouw- en Aannemingsbedrijf
v Staatssecretaris van Financiën [1993] ECR I-5405, paragraph 18).
- Nor is it necessary for either the taxable person supplying the goods or performing
the service or the other party to the transaction to know the exact amount of the
consideration serving as the taxable amount in order for it to be possible to tax a
particular type of transaction (Case C-288/94 Argos Distributors v Commissioners of
Customs and Excise [1996] ECR I-5311, paragraphs 21 and 22). Consequently, it
does not matter that when the transaction is concluded the parties do not know the
basis on which VAT will be charged and that it remains unknown, even afterwards,
to the recipient of the service.
- The answer to be given to the second question must therefore be that Article
11A(1)(a) of the Sixth Directive is to be construed as meaning that, in foreign
exchange transactions in which no fees or commission are calculated with regard
to certain specific transactions, the taxable amount is the net result of the
transactions of the supplier of the services over a given period of time.
Costs
51. The costs incurred by the United Kingdom and French Governments and the
Commission, which have submitted observations to the Court, are not recoverable.
Since these proceedings are, for the parties to the main proceedings, a step in the
proceedings pending before the national court, the decision on costs is a matter for
that court.
On those grounds,
THE COURT (Fifth Chamber),
in answer to the questions referred to it by the High Court of Justice, Queen's
Bench Division, by order of 13 May 1996, hereby rules:
1. Transactions between parties for the purchase by one party of an agreed
amount in one currency against the sale by it to the other party of an
agreed amount in another currency, both such amounts being deliverable
on the same value date, and in respect of which transactions the parties
have agreed (whether orally, electronically or in writing) the currencies
involved, the amounts of such currencies to be purchased and sold, which
party will purchase which currency and the value date, constitute supplies
of services effected for consideration within the meaning of Article 2(1) of
the Sixth Council Directive (77/388/EEC) of 17 May 1977 on the
harmonisation of the laws of the Member States relating to turnover taxes
- Common system of value added tax: uniform basis of assessment.
2. Article 11A(1)(a) of the Sixth Directive must be construed as meaning that,
in foreign exchange transactions in which no fees or commission are
calculated with regard to certain specific transactions, the taxable amount
is the net result of the transactions of the supplier of the services over a
given period of time.
Gulmann Wathelet
Moitinho de Almeida
JannSevón
|
Delivered in open court in Luxembourg on 14 July 1998.
R. Grass
C. Gulmann
Registrar
President of the Fifth Chamber
1: Language of the case: English.
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URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/EUECJ/1998/C17296.html