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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Brunel Motor Company Ltd v Revenue and Customs & Anor [2008] EWHC 74 (Ch) (24 January 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/74.html Cite as: [2008] BVC 286, [2008] STC 1058, [2008] EWHC 74 (Ch), [2008] BTC 5161, [2008] STI 184 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Brunel Motor Company Limited |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs |
First Respondent |
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Ford Motor Company Limited |
Second Respondent |
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Raza Mithani (instructed by HMRC Solicitors) for the First Respondent
Jonathan Peacock QC (instructed by Ford Motor Company) for the Second Respondent
Hearing dates: 16th January 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Peter Smith J :
INTRODUCTION
TERMS OF SUPPLY AGREEMENT
"12. Termination
(a) This Agreement shall remain in force until terminated:-
(1) by Ford giving to the Dealer (and to FCE), provided that Ford is also terminating at the same time all other outstanding Main Dealer Vehicle Supply Agreements between it, FCE and Authorised Ford Dealers, at least 7 days prior written notice of termination;
(2) by either Ford, FCE or the Dealer giving to the others at least 60 days prior written notice of termination;
PROVIDED THAT this Agreement shall terminate automatically (without the need for notice) forthwith:-
(i) on an administration order being made in relation to Ford, FCE or the Dealer or an effective resolution being passed or an order being made for the winding up of Ford, FCE or the Dealer; or
(ii) on the appointment of a Receiver or Administrative Receiver to, or over any property of, Ford, FCE or the Dealer; or
(iii) the directors of Ford, FCE or the Dealer making a proposal for a voluntary arrangement or obtaining a moratorium pursuant to Part 1 of the Insolvency Act 1986; or
(iv) on equivalent steps or proceedings to those set out in sub-paragraphs (i) to (iii) above being taken in any jurisdiction in relation to Ford, FCE or the Dealer; or
(v) upon the date upon which the Dealer Agreement shall terminate (howsoever occasioned).
(b) Ford and/or FCE may also by notice in writing to the Dealer forthwith terminate this Agreement if the Dealer:
(i) does not pay any amounts due under this Agreement; or
(ii) is in breach of any of the other terms and conditions, express or implied, of this Agreement or of any of the terms and conditions of any other agreement between FCE and the Dealer; or
(iii) any manner of execution or distress upon the Dealer's property is levied or threatened; or a mortgagee or chargee takes steps to enforce its security against the Dealer (or in Northern Ireland, an order for the seizure and sale of goods is made against the Dealer under the Judgment Enforcement (NI) Order 1981 or in Scotland a right of hypothec is exercised over the Dealer's property or assets or the Dealer's property or assets are poinded or assessments are issued against the Dealer), or a meeting of the Dealer's creditors is called; or
(iv) does or causes to be done or permits or suffers any act or thing whereby Ford and/or FCE believe its right to the Vehicles are or may be put at risk; or
(v) suffers an event falling within paragraph (v) (change in the ownership etc of the Dealer) of Attachment 4B to the Dealer Agreement.
(c) Immediately upon the termination of this Agreement:
(i) all Unpaid-for Vehicles (whether supplied under Part A or Part B (but (for the avoidance of doubt) in the case of Vehicles supplied under Part B only if and to the extent that they shall be Vehicles in relation to which the due date for the payment of the invoice in accordance with the provisions of clause 4 of Part B shall have occurred prior to the date of termination) in the case of a termination upon the happening, in the case of the Dealer, of any of the events specified in paragraphs (a) or (b) of this clause 12, or upon the termination of the Dealer Agreement as specified in paragraph (a)(v) of this clause 12; and
(ii) all Unpaid-for Vehicles supplied under Part A, in the case of a termination upon the happening, in the case of Ford or FCE of any of the events specified in subparagraphs (i) to (iv) of paragraph (a) of this clause 12 (but subject to clause 7(c) of Part A);
shall be returned to Ford, FCE or its agent (or as Ford, FCE or such agent may direct), but, in the case of Vehicles supplied under Part B, only if and to the extent that Ford and FCE shall so elect by notice to the Dealer, and the Dealer shall cease to be in possession of such Vehicles with the consent of Ford or FCE (as the case may be). Vehicles which fall to be returned under sub-paragraph (i) of this paragraph (c) or paragraph (d) of this clause 12 shall be returned at the expense of the Dealer. Vehicles returned pursuant to this paragraph (c) or the said paragraph (d) shall be in the same condition as when delivered to the Dealer, except and insofar as any modification, adaptation or addition shall have been carried out to them prior to termination (in which case the Dealer shall also become immediately liable to Ford or FCE (as the case may be) for the cost of reinstating the Vehicle to such condition. The termination of this Agreement (and the return of any Vehicle) shall be without prejudice to the respective rights, liabilities and obligations of Ford, FCE and the Dealer, with respect to Vehicles (including, without limitation, the Vehicle so returned) supplied to the Dealer under this Agreement prior to such termination (or return), and payments due or becoming due hereunder in respect of the same (including, without limitation, interest payable under clause 4(c) of Part A and clause 4(b) of Part B and any Violation Charge payable under clause 11 (b) of Part C)), and notwithstanding such termination the Dealer shall continue to be bound by clauses 5, 7, and 11 of this Part C.
(d) If in the case of Vehicles supplied under Part B the Dealer shall upon or subsequent to the date of termination of this Agreement fail to pay an invoice in respect of a particular Vehicle supplied under Part B on the due date for the payment of such invoice in accordance with the provisions of clause 4 of Part B, the said Vehicle shall, if Ford or FCE shall so elect by notice to the Dealer, be returned to Ford, FCE or its agent (or as Ford, FCE or any such agent may direct) and paragraph (c) of this clause 12 shall apply to such Vehicle.
(e) The return of a Vehicle to Ford or to FCE or its agent pursuant to this clause 12 shall be without prejudice to the other rights and remedies of Ford and/or FCE against the Dealer with respect to such Vehicle and its sale and purchase under this Agreement including without limitation the right to the extent applicable to damages for breach of contract and the recovery of the purchase price of the Vehicle if and to the extent that the same is due and payable but unpaid.
(f) Paragraph (ix) of Attachment 4B to the Dealer Agreement shall be amended by the addition of the following at the end after the word "Agreement": "or the Vehicle Supply Agreement between Ford and the Dealer (as amended from time to time)."
"21 Entire Agreement
This Agreement and the Dealer Agreement contains the entire agreement and the understanding of the parties hereto with the respect of the subject matter of this Agreement and can only be amended in writing by duly authorised officers of each of the parties."
THE EVENT
ACTIONS UPON TERMINATION
DECISION OF THE TRIBUNAL
THE TRIBUNAL'S DECISION
"Decision of the tribunal with reasons
31 We have not found this to be a straightforward case.
32 We see the force of Mr Hitchmough's submission that the issue of a credit note is inappropriate if it serves only to remove a liability to tax in respect of which bad debt relief should have been claimed. The authorities cited by him show that it is not open to the parties retrospectively to pretend that a taxable supply never took place if in truth it did. But we agree with Mr Peacock that the circumstances in which a credit might properly be due are not circumscribed to the extent urged by Mr Hitchmough.
33 What if the parties contractually anticipate the possibility of administrative receivership and in that case expressly provide a procedure for rescission in the agreement governing the supplies? That, in our view, must be relevant to determining the scope of the supplies.
34 In the commercial world, it is nowadays very common for a supplier of goods to seek to mitigate the financial downside of the insolvency of its debtor by agreeing for the retention of title in the goods supplied until they have been paid for. In such a case, the goods can be resold by the supplier if the debtor defaults. Logically, in an agreement containing detailed provisions as to interim possession of the goods pending payment, one would also expect detailed provisions governing the return of the goods to the supplier in order that they can be resold.
35 Accordingly, in this case, the Supply Agreement provides, in clause 12 of Part C, sub-clauses (c)(i) and (d), for the return to Ford, if it so chooses, of unpaid-for vehicles both where payment has become due prior to the onset of the Administrative Receivership and where payment becomes due following the termination of the Supply Agreement by reason of the administrative receivership. Even where the return of a vehicle takes place, sub-clauses (c)(i) and (e) provide that Ford's rights and remedies against the dealer will not thereby be affected, including the right to sue for damages and the right to sue to recover the purchase price of the vehicle, " … if and to the extent that the [purchase price] is due and payable but unpaid".
36 In accordance with ordinary principles of contract, the contracting parties would appreciate, on entering into the Supply Agreement, that where Ford suffered no loss on resale of the vehicles returned, it would not be in a position to sue in respect of the vehicles, save to recover nominal damages. Although not expressly stated in the Supply Agreement, it falls in our view to be implied that, in the circumstances just mentioned, the dealer would be unlikely to face a claim from Ford.
37 However, what if there were to be a loss on resale, or what if a particular vehicle, returned to Ford under the provisions, could not be resold? The Administrative Receivers would have to reckon with the possibility of claims by Ford against the group. An indication from Ford that it was content not to pursue the group would accordingly be most helpful. As we see it, it is this that lay behind the provision of the credit notes that we are considering.
38 We think that the parties to the Supply Agreement would all along appreciate that the dealer would probably not have to pay Ford anything in respect of vehicles returned under clause 12 of Part C. All that the credit notes achieved was to confirm that. The credit notes did not provide credit where it was not due; on the contrary, they served to confirm a cap upon the contractual liability of the group, a cap which, we think, must have been anticipated by the contracting parties as likely to result if the Supply Agreement were to be operated according to its terms.
39 By the same token, it would not have been open to Ford to have claimed bad debt relief, given that the effect of having operated the Supply Agreement according to its terms was that Ford had received consideration for the debt. The position immediately before the issue of the credit notes was that Ford was constrained to recognize that, having had returned to it the vehicles affected by clause 12 of Part C of the Supply Agreement, nothing further was due.
40 Thus it seems to us that the position was analogous to that in AEG (UK) Ltd v The Commissioners of Customs and Excise (VAT Decision No 11428), a tribunal decision of Mr Paul Heim, CMG. In that case he decided that preference shares received under a voluntary arrangement entered into by the debtor company amounted to consideration for the prior debt. The Chairman stated:
"The issue of the shares under the voluntary agreement operated to replace the debt due to the Appellant Company by the shares, as it did those of other creditors so that there was not, upon receipt of the share certificate, any 'amount outstanding' which could be the subject of bad debt relief."
41 Clearly it would be wrong if Ford were enabled to make a claim for bad debt relief without giving full credit for having realized its security under clause 12. As well as providing Brunel with the evidence required for treating the group as discharged, the issue of the credit notes constituted an acceptance by Ford that it would not be correct to assert an entitlement to bad debt relief in this case".
(1) The vehicles were returned
(2) Ford issued the credit notes
(3) The Appellant acting by the Administrative Receivers no longer claimed the VAT on the invoices as input tax
(4) The Administrative Receivers paid the VAT to HMRC in full without any such deduction
(5) Ford sold the vehicles to the Administrative Receivers at the same price (including VAT)
(6) That enabled the Administrative Receivers to trade the company out for the benefit of the old creditors of the Appellant.
(7) Both the Appellant and Ford acted as if the Supply Agreement had been rescinded and there were no further obligations arising under it.