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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 >> BMW AG & Anor, R (on the application of) v HM Revenue & Customs [2009] EWCA Civ 77 (18 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/77.html Cite as: [2009] BTC 5222, [2009] STC 963, [2009] EWCA Civ 77, [2009] STI 549, [2009] BVC 221 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Mr Justice Tugendhat
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
and
LORD JUSTICE MOSES
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The Queen on the Application of BMW AG & Another |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Commissioners for HM Revenue & Customs |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
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Mr Jonathan Peacock QC and Francis Fitzpatrick (instructed by Dorsey & Whitney (Europe) Llp) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 17th December 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moses :
Introduction
i) HMRC had failed to consider the effect the decision would have on BMW AG's ability promptly to recover input tax incurred on transactions with non-associated parties andii) it had failed to consider whether the export through BMW AG, resulted in a significant cash flow advantage for the BMW group which it would not have obtained if BMW UKM was itself both manufacturer and exporter.
The Facts
"Direction of BMW AG onto a Quarterly Stagger
The Commissioners remain of the view that BMW AG having a monthly VAT stagger does give a significant cash flow advantage and that there is no commercial rationale for having the monthly VAT stagger other than to obtain this cash flow advantage.
I therefore wish to formally advise you that the Commissioners will now take action to remove this cash flow advantage by aligning the VAT accounting periods for BMW AG and BMW UK (the UK Vat group) and I hereby DIRECT under Regulation 25(i)(a) Vat Regulations 1995, that BMW AG will no longer be allowed to make returns in respect of periods of one month and instead will be placed on standard quarterly tax returns with accounting periods ending on 31 January, 30 April, 31 July and 31 October."
The direction was stated to be prospective with effect from 1 August 2006.
Statutory Provisions
"every person who is registered … shall, in respect of … every period of 3 months ending on the dates notified either in the certificate of registration issued to him or otherwise, not later than the last day of the month next following the end of the period to which it relates, make to the Controller a return … showing the amount of VAT payable by or to him …provided that –
(a) the Commissioners may allow or direct a person to make returns in respect of periods of one month and to make those returns within one month of the periods to which they relate;
(c) where the Commissioners consider it necessary in any particular case to vary the length of any period or the date on which any period begins or ends or by which any return shall be made, they may allow or direct any person to make returns accordingly, whether or not the period so varied has ended."
The Policy
"4. Traders whose outputs consist wholly or mainly of zero-rated supplies of goods or services (e.g. exporters and food producers) will normally claim a net repayment of tax at the end of each accounting period. If they were able to claim a repayment only once every three months, they could experience some difficulty in financing the temporary tax burden. To overcome this problem as far as possible, regular repayment traders … will be permitted to lodge their claims once a month …"
"Our policy is that staggers be aligned if there is a consistent pattern of supplies between associated businesses, timed so that there is a VAT cash flow advantage to the business with little or no apparent commercial reason for the supplies to be timed as they are. We are particularly concerned about high value cases, especially where there is a suspicion that supplies are overvalued."
"continue to be concerned about situations in which businesses 'stagger' their VAT accounting periods in order to gain an unjustified and unintended cash flow benefit at the expense of the revenue…HMRC intend to continue to exercise [their power to allow VAT periods between associated businesses] where there is little or no commercial rationale for the VAT period 'stagger' between the associated businesses besides obtaining the cash flow advantage. They may do so, notwithstanding that the usual policy for businesses expecting to make regular claims for repayment of VAT in other factual situations is to allow monthly returns."
"when transactions are routed through associated businesses on different staggers, and input tax is claimed by the associated business before the main business pays the output tax on the transaction, the accumulative effect of these schemes is that the government consistently receives a substantial amount of tax later than it would do otherwise. In effect, it provides to the business an interest-free loan of the VAT involved at the expense of the Exchequer.
Of course, businesses are entitled to structure themselves as they choose and we are not objecting to them routing transactions via associated businesses if that is what they wish to do. We do, however, reserve the right to put both businesses on the same VAT return period ends, if they do not have a reason for the differing period ends other than to generate a VAT cash flow advantage." (letter dated 2 November 2005)
Later HMRC asserted:-
"We are tackling what we believe are essentially artificial arrangements which have little or no commercial rationale. The 'normal' cash flow benefit that is inherent in monthly repayment returns is a long-established feature of the tax, which we have no wish to disturb." (letter dated 8 March 2006)
The Rationality of the Policy
"…the operation of the VAT accounting system will mean that HMRC will suffer a cash flow disadvantage in respect of some supplies, but gain a cash flow advantage in respect of other supplies. Where parties deal at arms' length, it is to be expected, globally, the cash flow advantages and disadvantages for HMRC will broadly balance out. Any imbalance arising from parties dealing at arms' length will usually be part of the normal operation of the VAT system.
However, where the parties are not dealing at arms' length, they may time their supplies or their VAT period ends such that they consistently obtain a cash flow advantage, that advantage always coming at the expense of the Exchequer." ( §§ 20 and 21, statement dated 23 February 2007).
The Judgment of Tugendhat J
"Neither the applicant companies nor HMRC had previously considered whether a benefit from mismatched staggers might be justified by comparing that benefit with the benefit the manufacturing companies might have enjoyed making the exports directly themselves (and so becoming repayment traders), instead of routing the cars through export companies. In short, no consideration was given to the position as it would be if BMW UKM exported its cars itself."(§ 91)
The judge's conclusion was that the decision-making process was flawed because HMRC had failed to consider a comparison between the existing arrangements between BMW UKM and BMW AG and the situation as it would be if BMW UKM was the exporter of its own cars. He said:-
"If the calculation made by Mr Wharton in his second witness statement is correct (and it is not contradicted) it appears that there may be little cash flow benefit accruing to the BMW group at the expense of the revenue by the existing arrangements between UKM and AG, compared with the situation as it would be if UKM was the exporter of its own cars. On Mr Wharton's calculation it appears that, if the accounting periods were aligned, then the revenue would be better off than it would be if UKM were a direct exporter. In other words, the commercial considerations which make it appropriate for exports to be routed through AG would (if HMRC's arguments prevail) carry a cost to the BMW group in terms of VAT, and a corresponding benefit to the revenue. So the policy, seen from that point of view, would produce a benefit for the revenue from UKM's commercial need to export the cars through AG. Seen from this point of view, the policy as applied by HMRC may not protect the revenue from a disadvantage. The disadvantage arising from the mismatched accounting periods may be no more than the disadvantage that HMRC accept they ought to suffer if the exports were made by UKM directly. In other words, the interposition of an associated export company may do no more than shift to the export company a cash flow benefit substantially equivalent in value to the benefit which the manufacturer would enjoy if it were the direct exporter, with the result that the group as a whole enjoys no new benefit from the arrangement. If the disadvantage which concerns HMRC arises in this way, then in my judgment it is not logical or fair to characterise it as unjustified or unintended." (§ 99)
He continued:-
"I have held that the policy is not itself irrational. But in my judgment logic and fairness requires that, in applying the policy in a particular case, there should be some enquiry as to what financial difference, if any, results to the traders (and thus also to HMRC) by the use of the associated export company. It is not logical or fair to apply a policy directed to preventing unjustified and unintended cash flow benefits at the expense of the revenue under the assumption that the benefit will be unjustified and unintended if there is a mismatch of accounting periods which is not explained by administrative difficulties, and ignoring what the position would be if the trader exported his cars direct.
It may, of course, be that, if the comparison made by Mr Wharton in his second witness statement is investigated, then it could still appear that the benefit to AG is significant, unjustified and unintended. In that case there would be a sound basis for a direction to AG to account monthly. But as matters stand, there has been no such investigation, and the decision making process was flawed." (§§ 103 and 104).
"Given that in this case the sole issue raised by HMRC is that exports have been routed through an associated company (and not that there has been any manipulation of dates of supply or payment, or anything else), it seems to me that the comparison made by Mr Wharton in his second statement cannot be dismissed as irrelevant." (§ 96)
In that paragraph the judge mis-states the issue raised by HMRC. It was not concerned as to routing through an associated company; it was concerned with the mismatch of the accounting periods of the two associated companies.
BMW AG's Trade with Unassociated Third Parties
"As regards the BMW AG…registration, input VAT is derived from supplies made to it from the BMW (UK) Holdings VAT Group and, to a very small extent, from third party suppliers in the UK. Accordingly, as far as I am aware, the only relevant concern could be as regards the mismatch between the VAT accounting periods of the BMW AG registration and that of the BMW (UK) Holdings VAT Group." (my emphasis)
Thus, far from asserting that the issue of input tax arising from third party supplies was a relevant consideration, it was dismissed by BMW itself. Such input tax was only incurred to a very small extent and formed no part of the "only relevant concern". Thus, it cannot be said that in making a decision Mr Hulin was required to consider the point when there was no basis for believing it to be a live issue. Indeed it never became a live issue even when BMW filed its statements of facts and grounds in either of Mr Wharton's two affidavits, or in response to Hulin's statement which referred to the policy of considering the effect of third party supplies. Nor was the point even mentioned in BMW AG's skeleton argument. There was no basis for concluding that HMRC erred as a matter of law in failing to consider the point. Moreover, the facts demonstrate that there was no point to consider.
Power to Withdraw Permission
Lord Justice Lloyd:
Lord Justice Pill: