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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 >> Investment Trust Companies v Revenue and Customs [2013] EWHC 665 (Ch) (26 March 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/665.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 665 (Ch), [2013] WLR(D) 125 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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INVESTMENT TRUST COMPANIES |
Claimants |
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(in liquidation) |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Defendants |
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Mr Jonathan Swift QC and Mr Andrew Macnab (instructed by Solicitor for HMRC) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 22 January 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Henderson:
Introduction
"… the rival submissions on this part of the case appear to me to raise issues of great difficulty and potential importance, in an area where the law is evolving rapidly, and where there is good reason to expect that authoritative guidance on at least some key aspects of the problem may be provided in the near future by either or both of the ECJ (on the reference in Littlewoods) and the Supreme Court (on the appeal in FII)."
The decision of the Supreme Court in FII (SC)
"In these circumstances it is in my view open to this court (whether or not it was strictly open to the Court of Appeal) to state clearly that where tax is purportedly charged without lawful Parliamentary authority, a claim for repayment arises regardless of any official demand (unless the payment was, on the facts, made in order to close the transaction). The same effect would be produced by saying that the statutory text is itself a sufficient demand, but the simpler and more direct course is to put the matter in terms of a perceived obligation to pay, rather than an implicit demand. That is how it was put by Wilson J in her well known dissent in Air Canada v British Columbia [1989] 1 SCR 1161, 1214-1215 … In my view English law should follow the same course. We should restate the Woolwich principle so as to cover all sums paid to a public authority in response to (and sufficiently causally connected with) an apparent statutory requirement to pay tax which (in fact and in law) is not lawfully due."
All the members of the court agreed with this reformulation, apart from Lord Sumption who dealt with the question independently in paragraphs [171] to [174] and reached a similar conclusion.
"20. The crucial question, however, is whether the retrospective application of that limitation period [i.e. section 320 of the 2004 Act] to claims based on mistake was in conformity with the principles of equivalence and effectiveness, as explained by the Grand Chamber in its judgment in these proceedings … I accept, of course, that the Woolwich remedy on its own was an effective way of vindicating the San Giorgio right. But what about the principle of equivalence which, as Lord Reed points out in para 218, is a complementary requirement? The Woolwich remedy was not the only remedy in domestic law, as it was held in DMG that a taxpayer who wrongly paid tax under a mistake of law is entitled to a restitutionary remedy against the Revenue. The theory is that judicial decisions must be taken to declare the law that applies to the case with retrospective effect, whenever the events that gave rise to the claim occurred. So, in the events that have happened, the DMG remedy must be taken to have been always available. It is not just a mirror image of the remedy that is afforded under Woolwich. Both remedies lead to the same result. But they are different remedies founded upon different principles and they are subject to different limitation periods. There may be other differences, depending on the facts and circumstances of each case.
21. There is no obvious way of deciding which of these two remedies must be adopted if only one can be allowed. Is it to be held the claimant is under an obligation, if both are available, to select the remedy which best suits his opponent? This would be an odd result, as I said in DMG [2007] 1 AC 558, para 51. For the reasons which I gave in that paragraph, I think that domestic law must reject this idea because it has no basis in principle. In fairness, the claimant ought to be free to choose the remedy that best suits his case. The principle of equivalence requires that the rules regulating the right to recover taxes levied in breach of EU law must be no less favourable than those governing similar domestic actions. So it seems to me that it must follow, if the means of recovery of taxes levied contrary to EU law are to match those in domestic law, that both remedies should be available."
"111. These provisions were challenged in the lower courts primarily on the ground that they infringed the principle of effectiveness. There was little discussion of legitimate expectations. Lord Sumption holds, at para 199, that reasonable persons in the position of the test claimants would not, until Park J's judgment in DMG on 18 July 2003, have counted on being able to recover tax on the ground of mistake of law; and that even after that decision the existence of such a claim was being challenged on serious grounds. He concludes from that proposition that no one in the position of the test claimants could have had a reasonable and realistic expectation of recovering tax on the ground of mistake.
112. I cannot disagree with that conclusion … But in any case I do have great difficulty in applying the same reasoning to upholding the validity of section 320 against attack under the principle of effectiveness, in the light of M & S. The judgment of the Court of Justice in that case lays down a clear requirement for transitional provisions, and that requirement is derived at least as much from the principle of effectiveness and the principle of legality as from the more limited principle of protection of legitimate expectations …
113. If one asks what the test claimants were entitled to, and what they could expect to continue to be entitled to, in the way of national remedies to recover tax levied and paid contrary to EU law, the answer is plainly not that they were entitled to the indefinite continuation of a range of alternative remedies …
114. Nor were the test claimants entitled to a remedy arrived at by some precise formula furnished by EU law. That would be contrary to the basic principles laid down in Rewe I (Case 33/76) [1976] ECR 1989, and repeated in countless cases since then. What they were entitled to was that national law should provide an effective remedy which met the requirements of EU principles of effectiveness and equivalence; and that any curtailment of any relevant limitation period should comply with those principles, as well as with the principle of legitimate expectations. The fact that they could not have complained, in another parallel universe in which section 32(1)(c) [of the Limitation Act 1980] had never existed, is not decisive on the issue of effectiveness.
115. I would therefore hold that section 320 was contrary to EU law as infringing the principle of effectiveness as explained in M & S, and that section 107 was contrary to EU law both on that ground and (in agreement with Lord Sumption) under the principle of protecting legitimate expectations …"
"212. In considering that issue, there appear to me to be three central questions, which can at this stage be broadly stated as follows. The first is whether the ground of action enabling taxes levied in breach of EU law to be recovered on the basis of mistake falls within the ambit of the EU principle of effectiveness. It is argued that it does not, since the ground of action based on an unlawful demand in itself fully satisfies the requirement of EU law that there should be an effective remedy. Since no additional remedy is required by the principle of effectiveness, it follows, so the argument runs, that the additional ground of action which English law provides, based on mistake, falls outside the scope of that principle. I disagree. As I shall explain, it appears to me that the EU principle of equivalence, which is the complement of the principle of effectiveness, applies to the grounds of action available for the recovery of taxes in domestic law. Where an action for the recovery of taxes under domestic law can be based either on the ground of mistake or on the ground of unlawful demand (or, as in the present case, on both grounds), it follows from the principle of equivalence that both grounds of action should also be available in similar circumstances to enforce an analogous right under EU law. So long as they must both be available, they must also both be effective. The principle of effectiveness therefore applies to both grounds of action."
"Where both these grounds of action are available for the recovery of taxes which have been levied in breach of domestic law, and a person seeking to recover such taxes can choose to base his claim on whichever ground of action best suits his interests, it follows from the principle of equivalence that the same grounds of action, and the same freedom of choice, must equally be available in analogous circumstances to a person seeking to recover taxes which have been levied in breach of EU law: otherwise, claims based on EU law would be less favourably treated than similar claims based on domestic law. As the Court of Justice stated in Rewe-Handelsgesellschaft Nord mbH v Hauptzollamt Kiel (Case 158/80) [1981] ECR 1805, para 44, the system of legal protection established by the Treaties implies that "it must be possible for every type of action provided for by national law to be available for the purpose of ensuring observance of Community provisions having direct effect" (emphasis added)."
"224. The first of these contentions appears to me to be off the point. The fact that the ground of action based on an unlawful demand satisfies the San Giorgio principle does not exclude the possibility that the ground of action based on mistake also satisfies that principle. Indeed, the ground of action based on mistake is of considerable practical importance as a means of enforcing rights to repayment derived from EU law, as the present case demonstrates, since it enables claims relating to taxes levied in breach of EU law to be brought outside the six-year limitation period, reckoned from the date of the payment, which applies to claims based upon the Woolwich principle: a period which may have expired before the mistake as to the validity of the tax legislation is discovered. Admittedly, if English law had evolved differently, and the ground of action based on mistake had not been available, then the ground of action based on an unlawful demand might well have met the requirements of EU law. The fact of the matter, however, is that English law provides two grounds of action which are capable of satisfying the San Giorgio principle, and the principle of equivalence therefore requires that both grounds of action should be available for the enforcement of rights derived from EU law.
225. The second contention also appears to me to be mistaken. The two grounds of action are not identical: in particular, subject to the legislation at issue in the present case, they are subject to different limitation periods. The mistake ground of action admittedly includes an additional element, namely that the taxes were paid under a mistake; but it is the presence of that additional element which enables the claimant to benefit from an extended limitation period which begins when the mistake is discovered or could with reasonable diligence have been discovered, rather than beginning with when the payment was made. The mistake ground of action is therefore a valuable remedy for the recovery of taxes levied contrary to EU law. If it were not available for that purpose, then the person who had paid taxes levied contrary to EU law would be in a less favourable position than the person who had a similar claim under domestic law."
"Third, the test claimants' argument is contrary to principle. The starting point for any analysis of the law in this area is that, subject to the principles of effectiveness and equivalence, it is for national law to determine what remedies are available to enforce a directly effective EU right and on what procedural or other conditions. I have made this point already: see para 145 above. The right of the claimants to choose from the range of causes of action recognised by English law is a right derived solely from English procedural law and it exists only to the extent that English law so provides. So long as the principles of effectiveness and equivalence are respected, a choice between concurrent national law remedies need not exist, and in some member states does not exist, at any rate to the same extent."
"… applied in a simpler and more natural way by not construing section 33 as impliedly setting itself up as an exclusive provision (which it did not do expressly, unlike section 80 of the Value Added Tax Act 1994). The test claimants submit that the application of Marleasing cannot rework section 33 in a way that serves any relevant purpose. But to read it as non-exclusive does not go against its grain. It would merely exclude an implication which is itself no more than a process of statutory construction."
"The Court of Appeal held that section 33 did impliedly exclude a right of action at common law, even in relation to claims for tax overcharged contrary to EU law. They then dealt with the resulting inconsistency with EU law by reinterpreting the section so as [to] remove the offending restrictions and the element of discretion. I think that this was wrong in principle. I very much doubt whether such radical surgery can be justified even under the extended principles of construction authorised in Marleasing. Its effect would be fundamentally to alter the scheme of the provision. But, however that may be, it seems, with respect, eccentric to imply an ambit for section 33 which is inconsistent with EU law and then to torture the express provisions so as to deal with anomalies that but for the implication would never have arisen."
The decision of the ECJ in Littlewoods
"57. … In the context of the fourth question, [the national] court is required, in particular, to determine the question whether a taxable person who is claiming back similar taxes or charges levied in breach of national law, together with interest, may select the basis for the interest claims at will under common law or, as the case may be, in accordance with statutory provision, and may therefore, if all the necessary conditions are met, decide in favour of the Woolwich claim, the mistake-based claim or another claim, thereby also determining himself the detailed rules governing payment of interest.
58. If the referring court should conclude in that regard that the detailed rules governing payment of interest on VAT collected in breach of EU law are less favourable than the detailed rules governing similar domestic interest claims, because the taxable person can determine the limitation period and the other characteristics of the similar domestic interest claims through the choice of claim, whereas that is not the case for interest on VAT collected in breach of EU law, it would be required to apply the more favourable rules, governing similar domestic interest claims, also to payment of interest on VAT collected in breach of EU law, thereby allowing the taxable person a free choice of claim.
59. In order to ensure the full effectiveness of European Union law, the referring court would be obliged, in that case, to refrain from applying, if need be, the national rules preventing payment of interest on VAT collected in breach of EU law in accordance with the more favourable rules which apply to similar domestic interest claims, and to apply the national provisions laying down more favourable rules for similar domestic claims to the interest claims stemming from European Union law. That obligation follows directly from the direct effect and the primacy of the European Union legislation from which the interest claim of the person liable for VAT who is entitled to reimbursement stems."
"… requires that the national rules referring in particular to the calculation of interest which may be due should not lead to depriving the taxpayer of an adequate indemnity for the loss occasioned through the undue payment of VAT."
As to what the nature of "an adequate indemnity" might be, the Court said only that it would be for the national court to determine the question "having regard to all the circumstances of the case": see paragraph 30. The Court noted in this connection that, pursuant to section 78, Littlewoods had already received simple interest in an amount of over £268 million. The relevance, if any, of that observation to the question whether Littlewoods had received an adequate indemnity is no doubt one of the many points which will have to be determined when the trial of the case resumes later this year.
"32. According to the referring court, application of s78 of the 1994 Act has the effect of excluding two actions provided for by common law, namely the Woolwich claim and the restitution action based on an error of law. In essence, the referring court asks whether, if it is found that s78 and s80 of the 1994 Act are contrary to EU law, a failure to apply the restriction contained therein in relation to the Woolwich claim in the main proceedings could lead to payment of interest which is compatible with EU law or whether the restriction contained in s78 and s 80 of the 1994 Act should be disapplied in respect of all the claims or remedies under common law.
33. As is apparent from consistent case law, when faced with a rule of law that is incompatible with directly applicable EU law, the national court is required to disapply that national rule, it being understood that that obligation does not restrict the power of the competent national courts to apply, amongst the various procedures of the internal legal order, those which are appropriate to safeguard the individual rights conferred by EU law …
34. In the light of the foregoing, the answer to the questions referred is that EU law must be interpreted as requiring that a taxable person who has overpaid VAT which was collected by the member state contrary to the requirements of EU VAT legislation has a right to reimbursement of the tax collected in breach of EU law and to the payment of interest on the amount of the latter. It is for national law to determine, in compliance with the principles of effectiveness and equivalence, whether the principal sum must bear "simple interest", "compound interest" or another type of interest."
The submissions of HMRC
Discussion and conclusions