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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 >> Birmingham Hippodrome Theatre Trust Ltd v Revenue And Customs [2014] EWCA Civ 684 (22 May 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/684.html Cite as: [2014] WLR(D) 232, [2014] STI 2223, [2014] STC 2222, [2014] WLR 3867, [2014] EWCA Civ 684, [2014] 1 WLR 3867, [2014] BVC 27 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (TAX & CHANCERY CHAMBER)
THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
FTC/40/2011
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE SHARP
and
LORD JUSTICE VOS
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BIRMINGHAM HIPPODROME THEATRE TRUST LTD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
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MS PHILIPPA WHIPPLE QC & MR BRENDAN McGURK (instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitors for HM Revenue and Customs) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 15 May 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Legal background
Accounting for VAT
"(2) In any case where, for any prescribed accounting period, there has been paid or credited to any person—
(a) as being a repayment or refund of VAT, or
(b) as being due to him as a VAT credit,
an amount which ought not to have been so paid or credited, or which would not have been so paid or credited had the facts been known or been as they later turn out to be, the Commissioners may assess that amount as being VAT due from him for that period and notify it to him accordingly."
"Where—
(a) as a result of a claim under this section by virtue of subsection (1) or (1A) above an amount falls to be credited to a person, and
(b) after setting any sums against it under or by virtue of this Act, some or all of that amount remains to his credit,
the Commissioners shall be liable to pay (or repay) to him so much of that amount as so remains."
"It shall be a defence, in relation to a claim under this section by virtue of subsection (1) or (1A) above, that the crediting of the amount would unjustly enrich the claimant."
"(3) … in any case where—
(a) an amount is due from the Commissioners to any person under any provision of this Act, and
(b) that person is liable to pay a sum by way of VAT, penalty, interest or surcharge,
the amount referred to in paragraph (a) above shall be set against the sum referred to in paragraph (b) above and, accordingly, to the extent of the set-off, the obligations of the Commissioners and the person concerned shall be discharged.
(3A) Where—
(a) the Commissioners are liable to pay or repay any amount to any person under this Act,
(b) that amount falls to be paid or repaid in consequence of a mistake previously made about whether or to what extent amounts were payable under this Act to or by that person, and
(c) by reason of that mistake a liability of that person to pay a sum by way of VAT, penalty, interest or surcharge was not assessed, was not enforced or was not satisfied,
any limitation on the time within which the Commissioners are entitled to take steps for recovering that sum shall be disregarded in determining whether that sum is required by subsection (3) above to be set against the amount mentioned in paragraph (a) above."
The facts
"(1) October 1979 to December 1999 – Ticket sales treated as taxable, with reclaim of input tax.
(2) January 2000 to October 2001 – Theatre closed for refurbishment, reclaim of input tax on refurbishment costs of approximately £5 million.
(3) November 2001 to May 2004 – Ticket sales treated as taxable, with reclaim of input tax.
(4) June 2004 onwards – Ticket sales exempt, reclaim of input tax restricted."
Item | Period | £ million | |
1 | January 1990 to November 1996 | Net overpayment – the subject of the appeal | 1.1 |
2 | December 1996 to December 1999 | Net overpayment – out of time | 0.9 |
3 | January 2000 to November 2001 | Net repayment of input tax – theatre closed for refurbishment | (5.0) |
4 | December 2001 to May 2004 | Net overpayment – out of time | 1.0 |
Net position | (2.0) |
"However, as the Theatre was closed between 1 January 2000 and 1 November 2001 to undertake a significant capital project, it is necessary to consider the impact that a retrospective claim would have in terms of the Theatre's output VAT recovery position. Taking into account the necessary input tax and output tax adjustments the Theatre has decided not to submit a retrospective claim."
The decision of the Upper Tribunal
"(1) whether HMRC may pick and choose between past out of time periods; (2) whether the set-off should be limited to amounts connected in some way to the claim for repayment; (3) time limits; (4) whether there had been one mistake or two; and (5) whether there should have been a transitional period before s. 81 (3A) came into force."
"(1) properly construed s. 81 (3A) does not permit HMRC to pick and choose; (2) set-off is limited to the same mistake, not to items linked in any other way; (3) no time limitation is required, although some modification of normal procedural rules may be needed; (4) it is unhelpful to characterise the mistakes by asking the question 'one mistake or two?' but the same mistake was made; and (5) no transitional period was required for the implementation of s. 81 (3A)."
"S. 81 (3A) is to be construed subject to the conditions, (1) that all relevant previous years need to be considered and (2) that in relation to the consideration of years in which the taxpayer is not required to keep records, the onus should be on HMRC to show that any adjustment should be made. However the operation of s. 81 (3A) is not precluded by the principles of legal certainty, equality, equivalence, or the supremacy of Community law."
The appeal
i) The Upper Tribunal were wrong on the "pick and choose" point. It was not open to them to interpret section 81 (3A) as they did.
ii) On the basis that the Upper Tribunal were wrong, section 81 (3A) must be interpreted in some other way so as to avoid a breach of EU law. They should have held that time limits could only be disregarded where the input tax was directly linked to the output tax.
iii) The interpretation of section 81 (3A) that the Upper Tribunal adopted contravened the EU principles of effectiveness, equality and legal certainty.
Applicable principles of EU law
"… it has been consistently held that implementation of a directive must be such as to ensure its application in full."
"[14] Direct applicability in such circumstances means that rules of Community law must be fully and uniformly applied in all the member-States from the date of their entry into force and for so long as they continue in force.
[15] These provisions are therefore a direct source of rights and duties for all those affected thereby, whether member-States or individuals, who are parties to legal relationships under Community law."
"… in the case of a directive such as the Sixth Directive, which lays down a comprehensive scheme of taxation, it is in my view possible to determine whether a taxable person has overpaid tax under national rules only by considering the combined effect of all relevant provisions of the directive on the transactions in question and by comparing the resultant liability with that arising under the national rules. The provisions determining the liability of a taxable person in respect of particular transactions must be regarded as an inseparable whole."
"…the obligation on the English courts to construe domestic legislation consistently with Community law obligations is both broad and far-reaching. In particular:
(a) It is not constrained by conventional rules of construction;
(b) It does not require ambiguity in the legislative language;
(c) It is not an exercise in semantics or linguistics;
(d) It permits departure from the strict and literal application of the words which the legislature has elected to use;
(e) It permits the implication of words necessary to comply with Community law obligations; and
(f) The precise form of the words to be implied does not matter.
The only constraints on the broad and far-reaching nature of the interpretative obligation are that:
(a) The meaning should "go with the grain of the legislation" and be "compatible with the underlying thrust of the legislation being construed."…. An interpretation should not be adopted which is inconsistent with a fundamental or cardinal feature of the legislation since this would cross the boundary between interpretation and amendment; and
(b) The exercise of the interpretative obligation cannot require the courts to make decisions for which they are not equipped or give rise to important practical repercussions which the court is not equipped to evaluate."
"…the possibility of exercising the right to deduct without any temporal limit would be contrary to the principle of legal certainty, which requires the tax position of the taxable person, having regard to his rights and obligations vis-à-vis the tax authority, not to be open to challenge indefinitely."
"First, by analogy with the situation applicable to the exercise of the right to deduct, the possibility of making an application for the refund of excess VAT without any temporal limit would be contrary to the principle of legal certainty, which requires the tax position of the taxable person, having regard to his rights and obligations vis-à-vis the tax authority, not to be open to challenge indefinitely."
"It is, nonetheless, also clear from the case law of the Court that the principle of legal certainty - and the finality of decisions, which flows from that principle - is not absolute in the sense that it prevails in every situation: rather it must be reconciled with other values worthy of protection, such as the principles of legality and the primacy of Community law, and the principle of effectiveness."
"Accordingly, if the principle of res judicata were to be applied in that manner, the effect would be that, if ever the judicial decision that had become final were based on an interpretation of the Community rules concerning abusive practice in the field of VAT which was at odds with Community law, those rules would continue to be misapplied for each new tax year, without it being possible to rectify the interpretation."
"In those circumstances, it must be held that such extensive obstacles to the effective application of the Community rules on VAT cannot reasonably be regarded as justified in the interests of legal certainty and must therefore be considered to be contrary to the principle of effectiveness."
Interpretation of section 81
"The effect of time limits is to curtail the objects of the Directive but such curtailment is permissible. The effect of s. 81 (3A) is to modify the effect of otherwise absolute time limits in favour of the state. That modification must be done in a way which does not violate fundamental principles of Community law and is in conformity with the object of the Directive. If s. 81 (3A) permitted the state to pick and choose between out of time periods so that it could choose only those in which the amounts were due to HMRC for the purpose of the set-off the result would not conform to that object. Thus if possible s. 81 (3A) should be construed so as to require all the amounts which would be due to or from HMRC if time limitations were disregarded to be taken into account for the purposes of this setting off."
"The same conclusion obtains if the question is approached as an emanation of the directly enforceable right of an individual under the Directive. That right is to bear no more tax than the Directive requires. The set-off against a within-time claim of an otherwise out-of-time claim by HMRC offends that right if out-of-time claims of the individual are ignored because the individual may then end up paying more than the Directive requires. Thus a limitation of the claims for which the time bar is raised to claims against the taxpayer chosen only by HMRC could make the individual's right under the Directive impossible to exercise. That is cured by applying s. 81 (3) and (3A) so that all otherwise time-barred claims, whether of HMRC or the taxpayer, are taken into account for the purposes of the set-off in s. 81 (3A)."
"Thus, whilst it could be expected that within the period for which domestic law requires records to be kept a taxpayer should have the onus of showing the amount of net effect of the relevant mistakes, in periods before this the onus of proof should be on the authority alleging otherwise - which would entail showing the net result was in its favour, not that there were only some periods in which that was the case. That approach we believe strikes the right balance between the full implementation of the Directive, effectiveness and legal certainty."
Result
Lady Justice Sharp:
Lord Justice Vos: