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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 >> The Prudential Assurance Company Ltd v HM Revenue and Customs [2015] EWHC 118 (Ch) (26 January 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/118.html Cite as: [2015] BTC 8, [2015] STC 1119, [2015] EWHC 118 (Ch), [2015] STI 245 |
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(Formerly: HC03C01346) |
CHANCERY DIVISION
Royal Courts of Justice Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE PRUDENTIAL ASSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HM REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Defendants |
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Mr David Ewart QC and Ms Barbara Belgrano (instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor to HMRC) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 20 and 21 October 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Henderson:
Introduction
a) Prudential's entitlement to recover compound interest;b) the question of jurisdiction (in accordance with Autologic principles) where lawful ACT was utilised against unlawful mainstream corporation tax ("MCT");
c) the 1990 to 1993 accounting periods;
d) calculation of the required credit under section 231 of ICTA 1988;
e) tracing;
f) utilisation of unlawful ACT;
g) late payment interest; and
h) the treatment of excess FII carried back within the same accounting period.
Issue 1: compound interest
"The amounts of restitution [of unlawfully exacted tax paid by mistake] are to be calculated on a compound interest basis computed on the conventional government rate for all periods including the period from payment to judgment or from payment to utilisation and therefrom to judgment."
Issue 1 asks whether that order applies to claims for unlawful corporation tax paid in accounting periods which remain open, i.e. which are the subject of an ongoing enquiry by HMRC which has not yet been closed. The accounting periods which remain open are those from and including the period ended 31 December 1994.
Issue 2: lawful ACT utilised against unlawful MCT
"Where lawfully incurred ACT has been utilised against an unlawful corporation tax liability arising in an open accounting period, is the claim to be regarded from the date of purported utilisation to amount to a claim for the recovery of unlawfully levied tax in the form of ACT or corporation tax?"
Issue 3: accounting periods ending 31 December 1990 to 1993
"I am satisfied on the evidence that Prudential has made reasonable efforts to obtain the necessary information, and in my view the figures in Ms Hine's tables should be adopted subject to any adjustments which may be agreed with the Revenue. Given the scale and historic nature of the enquiry, and the fact that the need to grant a credit based on nominal rates has only emerged as a result of FII (ECJ) II in 2012, I do not think it would be reasonable to expect perfect accuracy; and if there are any minor imperfections in the tables, it would in my judgment better accord with the EU principle of effectiveness to use the flawed figures rather than reject them entirely or insist on yet further investigations."
"E. The foreign nominal rate is the nominal rate of corporation tax applicable to the profits out of which the dividend was paid in the state of residence of the company which paid the dividend, which can normally be found by looking at the public tax legislation of that state.
F. For the purposes of the present case, the rates set out in the evidence of Nicola Hine are the applicable foreign nominal rates subject to any adjustments which may be agreed."
"8. A further source was a book entitled The Indirect Side of Direct Investment, Multinational Company Finance and Taxation, by Jack M Mintz and Alfons J Weichenrieder (2010 MIT Press). It includes an appendix entitled Historic Statutory Corporate Income Tax Rates, 1985-2007. The appendix details nominal corporate tax rates for a number of countries from 1985 to 2007 in the form of a table, exhibited at NJH 19. The table uses data from sources including Finance Canada, International Bureau of Fiscal Documentation, PricewaterhouseCoopers, The Bureau of Tax Policy Research at the University of Michigan and KPMG, compiled by the University of Toronto's International Tax Program. A brief summary of the authors' academic and taxation experience is provided at NJH20."
Issue 4: calculation of the section 231 credit
"When calculating a section 231 credit does one calculate the amount of foreign tax to compare with the ACT charge by grossing up for the foreign tax rate either:
(i) the gross dividend, that is the dividend plus recoverable and irrecoverable withholding tax; or
(ii) the net dividend, that is the dividend plus the recoverable withholding tax; or
(iii) some other amount?"
The parties now agree that the correct answer to this question is the first one, namely that the calculation must be performed by grossing up for the FNR the gross amount of the dividend, inclusive of all WHT. Only in this way can credit be given for the full amount of foreign tax attributable to the underlying profits.
Issue 5: tracing
a) Are HMRC entitled to contend that the section 231 credits generated on EU income could only be applied to reduce an ACT charge to the extent that EU income could be said to have been distributed so as to incur an ACT liability?b) If so, does the argument succeed and what is its effect upon the amounts claimed?
Issue 6: utilisation of unlawful ACT
Additional Issue (a): late payment interest on unlawfully paid ACT
Additional Issue (b): the treatment of excess FII carried back within the same accounting period
"Where a quarterly return has been made of franked payments and ACT has been paid in respect of those payments and the company receives excess FII after the end of that quarterly return period but before the end of the accounting period, is the resulting repayment of ACT:
(i) attributable to the offsetting of actual FII against franked payments so that unlawful ACT only arises from the offsetting of the section 231 credits which should have accompanied foreign dividend income against the net amount of ACT not repaid (the Claimants' case); or
(ii) a repayment of lawful and unlawful ACT in the proportions in which that ACT payment was made up of lawful and unlawful ACT (HMRC's case)?"
"The effect of these rather densely worded provisions may be summarised by saying that FII received in a later quarterly return period must first be applied in franking any dividends paid by the company in that period, but that any surplus may then be carried back to frank unrelieved dividends paid in an earlier quarter, thus generating a repayment of ACT. If there has been a change of ACT rates in the meantime, the repayment is not to exceed the amount of the tax credit comprised in the FII which is carried back."
"In my judgment the Revenue are correct on this point. Although the repayment is generated in its entirety by the receipt of actual FII, I can see no good reason why that fact should alter the characterisation of the ACT which is repaid, or create an exception to the general pro rata approach to utilisation which I have held to be appropriate."
Additional Issue (c): a further question arising from the carry back of excess FII within the same accounting period
"In the 1993 accounting period franked payments were only made in the second quarter. Excess FII arose in the fourth quarter and the return for that quarter claimed a corresponding repayment of ACT. However the ACT liability in the second quarter was met by a number of ACT payments some made before the fourth quarter and some after it. Is the repayment of ACT arising from the fourth quarter return to be regarded:
(i) as a repayment of each of those payments made towards the second quarter liability on a pro rata basis whether those payments were made before the fourth quarter or not (the Claimant's case); or
(ii) a repayment of only those payments of the second quarter liability which had been made before the fourth quarter on a pro rata basis (HMRC's view)."
The parties agree that the answer to this question would apply in other cases where the same circumstances arise.
Other matters