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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> BW Noble Ltd v Mitchell [1927] EWCA Civ 1 (07 February 1927) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/1927/1.html Cite as: [1927] 1 KB 719, [1927] KB 719, 11 TC 372, [1927] EWCA Civ 1, [1927] 11 TC 372 |
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COURT OF APPEAL
B e f o r e :
Sargant
and
Lawrence L.JJ.
Between:
____________________
B. W. Noble, Limited v. Mitchell. Mitchell v. B. W. Noble, Limited. |
____________________
Konstam K.C., Le Quesne K.C. and Merlin for the respondents (Ashley, Tee & Sons ).
29th and 30th November, 1926
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Income Tax, Schedule D, Case I—Business carried on abroad —Control—Profits of trade—Deduction.
Under its Articles of Association the management of a Company of insurance brokers registered in England was vested in its Board of Directors in London, with powers of delegation. One of the Directors was appointed Resident Director in France, and conducted the French business of the Company from an office in Paris under a power of attorney from the Company. He attended a few Board meetings in London, though not bound to do so. He also made some reports to the other Directors, and on one or two occasions received their concurrence with his proposals, but they did not interfere with his conduct of the French business. Separate accounts of that business were kept in Paris, but the results were incorporated in the balance sheets of the Company, though no part of the French profits was ever remitted to London.
The Company contended that the control of the Paris business was in Paris and not in London, and that the profits therefrom were accordingly not assessable to Income Tax.
The Company also claimed as a deduction from its profits for Income Tax purposes, a sum of £19,200 payable (by instalments) to a retiring Director in the following circumstances.
The original Directors were appointed for life so long as they held a qualifying number of shares, subject to dismissal forthwith for neglect or misconduct towards the Company. A Director so dismissed was only entitled to receive Jus salary then due and could be required to sell his shares to the other Directors at par. He would also have to surrender for cancellation certain notes issued by the Company entitling him to participate in surplus profits.
Circumstances arose in 1920 and 1921 in which the Company might possibly have been justified in dismissing one of the Directors, but, to avoid publicity injurious to the Company's reputation, it entered into negotiation with him for his retirement He claimed £50,000 compensation, but a compromise was arrived at and embodied in an agreement dated the 30th December, 1921, by which he agreed to retire from the Company, to transfer his 300 £1 shares to the other Directors at par value (they were then worth considerably more) and to surrender his participating notes. The Company agreed to pay him £19,200, and the Directors to pay him £300 (expressed to be consideration for his shares), making together £19,500 (payable in five annual instalments), which he agreed to accept in full satisfaction of all claims against the Company or the Directors.
The Special Commissioners on appeal decided against the Company on the question of the control of the French business, but in their favour on the question of the deduction of the said sum of £19,200. A Case for the opinion of the High Court was demanded both by the Company and by the Crown.
Held,
(1) that the control of the Company's Paris business was with the Board of Directors in London, that their authority was not divested by the power of attorney to the Paris Director, and that the Company was accordingly assessable to Income Tax in respect of its Pa-is profits under Case I of Schedule D (Egyptian Hotels, Limited v. Mitchell, 6 T.C. 152 & 542, distinguished);
and (2) that the instalments of the sum of £19,200 payable by the Company to the retiring Director under the agreement of the 30th December, 1921, were admissible deductions in arriving at its profits for Income Tax purposes.
Stated under the Income Tax Act, 1918, Section 149, by the Commissioners for the Special Purposes of the Income Tax Acts for the opinion of the King's Bench Division of the High Court of Justice.
(i) To acquire and carry on the business of an Insurance and Re-Insurance Broker and Agent previously carried on by Major Noble in London.
(ii) To carry on business as Fire, Life, Accident, Third Party, Burglary, Contingency, Employers Liability, Marine or any other Insurance or Re-Insurance Brokers and Agents for and London Managers of the business of any British, Colonial or Foreign Insurance or Re-Insurance Company, and any other trade or business whatsoever which can, in the opinion of the Board, be advantageously carried on by the Company in connection with or as ancillary to the general business of the Company.
A copy of the Memorandum and Articles of Association of the Company are hereto annexed marked " A " and form part of this Case.[1]
(b) By an agreement dated 15th December, 1916, Major Noble agreed to sell and the Company to purchase the said business carried on by Major Noble, and by a further agreement of the same date and made between the Company and Major Noble, it was agreed that Major Noble should act as Managing Director of the Company upon the terms and conditions therein contained. Copies of the said two agreements marked " B " and " C " respectively are annexed hereto and form part of this Case. [2]
(c) Under the Articles of Association of the Company the first directors of the Company were Major Noble, Mrs. Noble and Mr. Haylor. Major Noble was appointed Chairman and Managing Director, and as such he was entitled to preside at any General Meeting of the Company.
In the material period the Company had issued 500 Preference shares and 1,000 Ordinary shares of a nominal value of £1 each. The Preference shares, which were held with the exception of one share by Mrs. Noble, Major Noble's wife, did not carry with them any title to vote. The Ordinary shares were, in the period, held as follows :—
Major B. W. Noble | 500 |
Mr. C. E. Haylor | 300 |
M. Gabus | 200 |
1,000 |
The holders of these shares, of which Major Noble held half the total number issued, were entitled to vote at Shareholders' Meetings, and Major Noble as Chairman was entitled, upon equal division of opinion among the shareholders, to a casting or deciding vote.
The proposal to open offices in Paris was fully discussed and ultimately on the motion of the Chairman seconded by Mr. Haylor it was unanimously resolved—
" That a branch office of the Company be opened in Paris as soon as possible in order that the Company may adequately represent British Companies in France and increase and improve the present brokerage and re-insurance business of the Company there.
On the motion of the Chairman seconded by Monsieur Gabus it was further resolved that—
Mr. C. E. Haylor be requested to proceed to Paris with one other Director for the purpose of selecting an Office and organising the same and
That a sum not exceeding £1,000 be reserved for travelling and other expenses incidental to the formation and organisation of the Paris Office."
When the Paris Office was opened it was the intention of the Company to continue and extend the French brokerage business which (as stated in paragraph 4 hereof) had previously been done from London. But when the Company opened the Paris Office and commenced to do business there it found that the conditions under which Fire Insurance business was conducted in France did not permit of brokerage and direct insurance business being conducted there by the same person. The Company gave an undertaking to the President of the French Chamber of Brokers not to do brokerage business. Accordingly during the years material to this appeal the Company's business in Paris was confined to doing direct insurance business on behalf of the companies for whom it acted as Agents. Some business was got through Paris brokers who offered the Company risks, paying the usual brokerage charges. The Company itself did no brokerage or re-insurance business. Recently, however, the Company has taken over a re-insurance business in Paris formerly conducted by a Monsieur Regard and the Company now does re-insurance work in Paris.
During the material years the Company represented some of the same companies both in London and Paris, the only difference being that in Paris the agreements were for direct insurance, whereas in London they did general insurance business including re-insurance. The terms of remuneration, limits of risks, etc., were similar both in London and Paris.
As illustrative of the arrangements between the Company and the companies for whom it acted as agents either in England or in France the following documents which were produced to us are hereto annexed marked as indicated below and form part of this Case.
" D." (1) A resolution of L'Internationale Belge Societe Anonyme de Reassurances et de Co-Assurances of 17 May, 1919, authorising an account to be opened in London.[3]
(2) Letter of appointment of the Company as British Managers of the Belgian company dated 30th April,
1919. [4]
(3) Power of attorney from the Belgian company to the Company dated 22nd April, 1919. (1)
" E." Agreements to act as agents in France for the following companies—
(1) Caledonian (dated 21st October, 1919)
(2) West of Scotland 6th
(3) Scottish 25th September ,,
(4) Royal London 30th October „
(5) Garantia 22nd October, 1919
(6) Die Kjobendavnske (Copenhagen) 11th October, 1919.
The agreements with the Caledonian and other Scottish companies were negotiated by Monsieur Gabus in England or Scotland and were executed in England.[5]
" F." (1) Power of attorney from the Nippon Fire Insurance Co., Ltd., to the Company dated 1st March, 1920. (1) (2) Specimen forms of (a) interim guarantee, (b) guarantee policy and (c) note paper of the Company as agents of the Nippon Fire Insurance Co., Ltd. of Tokyo. [6]
" G." Power of attorney from the Nippon Fire Insurance Co., Ltd. to Messrs. Gabus, Haylor & Noble dated 24th December,
1920, and 4th March, 1921. [7]
" H." Power of attorney from the Royal London Auxiliary Insurance Co., Ltd. to Messrs. Noble, Haylor, Silver & Gabus dated 24th January, 1921. [8]
" I." Power of attorney from the City of London Insurance Co., Ltd. to Messrs. Noble, Haylor, Silver & Gabus dated 9th March, 1921. [9]
" J." Power of attorney from the Southern Union General Insurance Company of Australasia, Limited to Messrs. Noble, Silver & Gabus dated 10th March, 1922. [10]
" K." Letter of appointment of the Company as agents for France for the Southern Union General Insurance Company of Australasia, Limited dated 10th March, 1922. [11]
A copy of this power of attorney, which was sealed by the directors in London at a meeting held on 13th February, 1920, is annexed hereto marked " L " and forms part of this Case. At the same meeting powers of attorney in identical terms were executed by the Company in favour of the other directors, namely Major Noble and Mr. Haylor. At the same meeting the Company executed a power of attorney in favour of two of their staff to act as Chief Clerks of the Paris Office. A copy of the last mentioned power of attorney marked " M " is annexed hereto and forms part of this Case.[12] The first power of attorney granted to Monsieur Gabus did not meet the requirements of the French Board of Trade, for example registered letters could not be delivered to Monsieur Gabus because they were in the name of the Company. Accordingly a second power of attorney in favour of Monsieur Gabus was prepared in Paris by the Company's Solicitor, and executed by the Company in London on 15th December, 1920, a copy of which is annexed hereto marked " N " and forms part of this Case. Monsieur Gabus was appointed Resident Director in France and was relieved from attendance at Board meetings in London. He has, on a few occasions, attended meetings of the Directors in London and reports have been received by the Directors from him as to the progress of the business, and he has, on one or two occasions, received their concurrence with his proposals.
Apart from the occasions upon which he attended Directors' meetings in London, Monsieur Gabus from time to time came over from Paris to the London Office and on these occasions usually occupied the greater part of his time in interviewing the representatives of the principal British companies for whom the Company acted as agent in Paris.
From time to time Major Noble went over to Paris to see a French company for whom the Company acted in London, and on these occasions called to see Monsieur Gabus at the Paris Office, but did not interfere with the work at that Office.
Monsieur Gabus had special knowledge of insurance business in France not possessed by the other Directors and the Paris business conducted by him did not pass through the London Office. The other Directors have not interfered with the conduct by M. Gabus of the Paris business and by reason of their inexperience of French Insurance matters are not competent to do so. The Paris business derived its income from French business done by it, and its accounts were kept in Paris separate and apart from those of the London Company, but the results of Paris business were incorporated in the balance sheets of the Company. No part of the French profits were ever remitted to London.
The following documents which were produced in evidence before us are hereto annexed, marked as under, and form part of this Case, namely—
"0." Extracts from the Minute Book of the Company of meetings of Directors held on various dates between 1st September, 1919, and 9th March, 1921, inclusive. (It was stated in evidence that Monsieur Gabus was present at the meetings held on 1st, 15th and 17th September, 1919, 23rd March. 1920, 25th November, 1920, but was not present at the remaining meetings).
"P." Copy of Minutes of Annual General Meetings of the Company and of meetings of the Directors, of various dates between 26th May, 1921, and 4th July, 1923, inclusive. [13]
" Q." Copy of balance sheet and profit and loss accounts of the Company for the year ended 30th September, 1922. [14]
Further, under this agreement, the salaries of the directors for the first year were fixed at—
£2,000 to Major Noble,
£1,750 to Mr. Haylor and
£1,500 to Monsieur Gabus,
and it was provided that although these figures might be varied from time to time, having regard to the profits of the Company, the ratio should remain the same.
It was also provided that if any director should (inter alia) neglect his duties or be guilty of such misconduct towards the Company or otherwise as would in the absence of any agreement to the contrary entitle a company to summarily dismiss a director so offending from his employment, the Company should have, power to dismiss him forthwith paying to him such a proportion! of his salary only as should then be due. In the event of a director being so dismissed the remaining directors were empowered to require the director dismissed to sell his shares to them at par. It was also provided that upon the determination of the agreement from any cause whatever none of the directors should without the consent of the Company engage in any business similar to that of the Company within 3 miles of the City of London, for three years from' the determination of the agreement.
The agreement also provided that notwithstanding the provisions of the agreement of 25th November, 1918 (above mentioned) Haylor should be at liberty to engage in a business of a similar nature to that of the Company, in the City of London and elsewhere. There were mutual covenants between Haylor and the remaining Directors not to repeat accusations or insinuations of improper conduct.
A copy of the said agreement is hereto annexed marked " T " and forms part of this Case.
It was given in evidence that these shares were in fact worth considerably more than their face value, but it was not possible to put an exact value upon them.
The issued capital of the Company was £1,000 and the dividends declared in the three years ended 30th September, 1922, averaged about 677 per cent the figures being as follows :—
Dividends Year ended | London | Paris | Total |
30th September 1920 | £3,000 | Nil | £3,000 |
1921 | £4,000 | £4,995 | £8,995 |
1922 | £5,000 | £3,319 | £8,319 |
The above sum of £19,500 was payable in five annual instalments. The first instalment (which was duly paid) amounted to £5,500 and consisted of (a) the £300 payable by the Directors for Haylor's shares and (6) £5,200 being part of the £19,200 payable by the Company.
(a) That the business in Paris was for the purposes of Income Tax a business separate and distinct from the business in London and that this point had in fact already been decided by the Commissioners at the hearing in 1921 ;
(b) That the control of the Paris business was in Paris and not in London ;
(c) That the profits of the Paris business were not assessable to British Income Tax ;
(d) That the sum of £19,200 mentioned in paragraph 3 of this Case as payable to Mr. Haylor was money wholly and exclusively laid out for the purposes of the business, and that the instalments were admissible deductions from profits as and when they fell due.
(a) That the question of whether, in the years under appeal, the Paris business was a separate business was not concluded by the previous decision of the Special Commissioners on the 15th November, 1921, but was to be determined upon the evidence before us. the Commissioners hearing this appeal;
(b) That the Company carried on one undivided insurance business ; that the work done in Paris and London respectively merely consisted of different activities of one general business; that the Paris Office was simply a " branch office " and was not a separate business ;
(c) That whether the Paris Office was a separate business or not, it was part of the business of the Company ; that the control of the Company was in England ; that the Directors in London exercised control over the Paris Office and that the Company was assessable under Case I of Schedule D of the Income Tax Act, 1918, in respect of the whole of its profits, including the profits of its Paris Office ;
(d) (1) That assuming (which was denied) that the said sum of £19,200 or any part thereof represented commutation, or compensation for loss of salary to which Mr. Haylor would have continued to be entitled had he remained a Director and which would have continued to be an admissible deduction year by year in arriving at the Company's profits for assessment, the said sum of £19,200 paid or payable as such commutation or compensation and each instalment thereof was a capital sum and was not an expense proper to be set against the receipts of the Company on revenue account for the purpose of computing the balance of its profits;
(2) That assuming (which was denied) that the said sum of £19,200 or any part thereof represented compensation for loss of salary, it was a voluntary payment, inasmuch as, in the circumstances the Company was entitled to dismiss Mr. Haylor without compensation of any kind and was not under any obligation to continue to retain him in its service and pay him a salary. This was not therefore a commutation of any yearly sum which the Company continued liable to pay ;
(3) That the agreement to pay the sum of £19,200 was a compromise of a claim for £50,000 and if any part of this sum represented compensation for loss of salary (which was denied) the payment represented not only compensation for such loss, but also generally compensation for loss of anticipated dividends as a shareholder and of surplus profits as a Note holder, neither of which matters could in any circumstances be the subject of deduction in arriving at the Company's profits for assessment. The agreement of 30th December, 1921, did not attempt to apportion the £19,200 as between compensation for loss of anticipated dividends and surplus profits on the one hand and loss of salary on the other hand, and there was no evidence upon which the Commissioners could find that any particular sum was in fact payable or paid as compensation for loss of salary or by way of commutation of any payment which had it continued to be made year by year would have been an admissible deduction in arriving at the Company's profits for assessment;
(4) That in essence the sum of £19,200 was domestic expenditure incurred for the purpose of buying out a Director and shareholder for purely personal reasons and was not expenditure incurred for the purpose of earning profits of the Company;
(5) That neither the said sum of £19,200 nor the said instalment of £5,200 nor any other instalment thereof was money wholly and exclusively laid out or expended for the purposes of the Company's business ;
(6) That neither the said sum of £19,200 nor the said instalment of £5,200 nor any other instalment thereof was admissible as a deduction in computing the profits of the Company for assessment to Income Tax.
(e) That the said assessments were correct and should be confirmed.
(1) That we must concur in the decision given by our colleagues on 15th November, 1921, that the businesses in London and Paris were two separate businesses owned by the same person ;
(2) That the control of the Paris business remains in London, that the London Directors exercised control over the Paris office, and that the Company was assessable under Case I of Schedule D of the Income Tax Act, 1918, in respect of the Paris profits ;
(3) That the instalment of £5,200 paid to Mr. Haylor should be allowed as a business expense ; and as a result we reduced the assessment for 1923-24 to £6,254 ; we reduced the assessment for 1922-23 to £5,496 and we confirmed the assessment for 1921-22 in the sum of £3,411.
Immediately upon the determination of the appeal, the representative of the Company declared to us his dissatisfaction with our decision under head (2) of paragraph 13 above, and the representative of the Crown declared to us Ms dissatisfaction with our decisions under heads (1) and (3) of the same paragraph, as being erroneous in point of law and in due course required us to state a Case for the opinion of the High Court pursuant to the Income Tax Act, 1918, Section 149, which Case we have stated and do sign accordingly.
Mark Sturgis, H. M. Sanders,
Commissioners for the Special Purposes of the Income Tax Acts.
York House,
23, Kingsway,
London, W.C.2.
9th June, 1926.
Judgment on the Crown's Cross Apeal
"a sum of money expended, not of necessity and with a view to a direct and immediate benefit to the trade, but voluntarily and on the grounds of commercial expediency, and in order indirectly to facilitate the carrying on of the business, may yet be expended wholly and exclusively for the purposes of the trade."
"I am not going to be dismissed on a calculation of the salary I lose, because the measure of my damages must include the loss of the premium value of my shares and the loss of my profit-sharing certificates. "
" Instead of having this silting channel, we will have a concrete channel, in which there will be no silting at all. If you say, I will not have a ' railing which perpetually falls down or wants repainting; ' I will abolish it and I will build a brick wall which will not fall '' down or will not want repainting , "
that is a capital expenditure. But I do not see how that can be said in this case. This gentleman being there as an unsatisfactory servant was not a permanency. He was no doubt there for his life, but I do not think you can say :
"By an expenditure of capital I will get rid of this nuisance affecting my business, and have his room rather than his company by making this capital expenditure."
Mr. Konstam.—My appeal was dismissed with costs, and now my learned friend's appeal is?
Rowlatt, J.—Yes. This is the same case as the last one. We have done with Noble now?
Mr. Konstam.—Yes, my Lord, we have done with Noble now.
An appeal having been entered against the decision in the King's Bench Division in the second case, the case came before the Court of Appeal (Lord Hanworth, M.R., Sargant and Lawrence, L.JJ.) on the 7th February, 1927, when judgment was given unanimously against the Crown, with costs, confirming the decision of the Court below.
The Attorney-General (Sir Douglas Hogg, K.C.) and Mr. E. P. Hills appeared as Counsel for the Crown, and Mr. Konstam, K.C., Mr. Le Quesne, K.C., and Mr. Merlin for the Company.
" the other directors desired to get rid of '' him and considered it necessary for the sake of the good name of the Company to do so. It was admitted in evidence before '' us that the Company might possibly have been justified by law in exercising its powers of dismissal, . . . but as the other directors were very anxious that the matter should not become public, and that a scandal affecting the reputation of Company should be avoided, they entered into negotiations with [this director] for his retirement, "
and ultimately terms were agreed. The effect of that agreement was shortly this, that with reference to his shares in respect of which a demand could have been made under clause 19, if he had been guilty under clause 18, those shares were transferred at face value to his colleagues, but this director was not minded to admit that he had been guilty of conduct which enabled his colleagues to put in force clause 18; he was, however, prepared to negotiate, and no doubt the fact was that he was in a strong position. Now this is a company which was doing very good business indeed; it is a business, however, to which good faith, standing and credit are essential, and we must by no means overlook the findings of the Commissioners that the other directors considered it necessary for the sake of the good name of the Company to get rid of this director, and they also were bona fide satisfied that if possible they ought to avoid a scandal affecting the reputation of the Company, for both those objects were objects which were of deep importance to the Company. The Company's immediate as well as future interests were concerned in the way in which the directors handled that situation. The directors had to deal with a difficult problem, and remembering their attitude which I have already recounted, it seemed right to them to make an agreement with this director which should prevent a scandal, free the Company from the serious position in which the continuance of this director as a director would have placed it, and enable the Company to continue to maintain its good name and its good business. By the agreement, therefore, which they made on December 30th, 1921, apart from the term whereby the other directors bought his shares, it was agreed that the Company should pay to this director a sum of £19,200 and this total was the agreed sum settled between the parties, but this payment was to be by instalments over a period of four years; there was to be an immediate payment of £5,200, and for the rest there were to be four payments of £3,500 successively year by year.
" It was made clear in the <' necessity and with a view to a direct and immediate benefit to the trade but voluntarily and on the grounds of commercial expediency, and in order indirectly to facilitate the carrying on of a business, may yet be expended wholly and exclusively for the purposes of the trade. "
" I think only such losses can be deducted as are connected with it in the sense that they are really incidental to the trade itself, "
"These words are used in other Rules, and appear to me to mean for the purpose of enabling a person to carry on and earn profits in the trade."
"This gentleman being there as an unsatisfactory servant was not a permanency. He was no doubt there for ' his life, but I do not think you can say: ' By an expenditure ' ' of capital I will get rid of this nuisance affecting my business, ' ' and have his room rather than his company by making this ' 'capital expenditure.' I cannot look at it in that way. It ' seems to me it is simply this, although the largeness of the ' figures and the peculiar nature of the circumstances perplex ' one, that this is no more than a payment to get rid of a servant ' in the course of the business and in the year in which the ' trouble comes."
"Instances, he says on page 213 [25], of such payments may be found in the gratuity of £1,500 paid to a reporter on his retirement(3) .... and in the expenditure of £4,494 in '' the purchase of an annuity for the benefit of an actuary who had retired, which in Hancock's case(4) was allowed, and I think rightly allowed, to be deducted from profits."
Lord Hanworth, M.R.—Dismissed with costs.
Note 1 Omitted from the present print, with the exception of Article No. 15. [Back] Note 2 Omitted from the present print. [Back] Note 3 Omitted from the present print [Back] Note 4 Omitted from the present print [Back] Note 5 Omitted from the present print [Back] Note 6 Omitted from the present print [Back] Note 7 Omitted from the present print [Back] Note 8 Omitted from the present print [Back] Note 9 Omitted from the present print [Back] Note 10 Omitted from the present print [Back] Note 11 Omitted from the present print [Back] Note 12 Omitted from the present print [Back] Note 13 Omitted from the present print [Back] Note 14 Omitted from the present print [Back] Note 15 Omitted from the present print [Back] Note 17 Atherton v. British Insulated and Helsby Cables, Ltd., 10 T.C. at p. 191 [Back] Note 18 Smith v. The Incorporated Council of Law Reporting, 6 T.C. 477. [Back] Note 20 10 T.C. at p. 192. [Back] Note 21 10 T.C. at p. 191 [Back] Note 22 5 T.C. at p. 219 [Back] Note 23 Ibid. at p. 220. [Back] Note 25 Ibid, at p. 192. [Back] Note 26 Hancock v. General Reversionary and Investment Company, Ltd.,. 7 T.C. 358 [Back] Note 27 Smith v. The Incorporated Council of Law Reporting, 6 T.C. 477. [Back] Note 30 Atherton v. British Insulated and Helsby Cables, Ltd., 10 TC 155. [Back]