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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Kuoni Travel Ltd v Boyle & Ors [2013] EWHC 877 (QB) (17 April 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2013/877.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 877 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
LONDON MERCANTILE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
KUONI TRAVEL LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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JOHN BOYLE DEBORAH MARSHALL ANDREW LAPPING STEWART ROBERTSON PAUL JOHNSTON |
Defendants |
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Jonathan Bremner (instructed by Gateley) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 26 to 28 February 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
JUDGE MACKIE QC:
Background
How SVL came to pay TVA- matters agreed or not much disputed
"Another big problem is the Swiss VAT. Once your branch office is registered in the trade registry, you must subject it to the Swiss VAT for the sales revenue achieved in our territory. It may also be that it will go back to the past."
"Enclosed herewith please find a questionnaire in order that we can examine whether we must enter you in the register of VAT taxpayers in accordance with Articles 10 and 11 of the Federal Law on Value Added Tax of 12 June 2009.
This 'questionnaire for registration as a VAT taxpayer' (from page 3) serves as a basis for us to determine whether, and from when, we must register you in the register of VAT taxpayers."
"Below is the correspondence and confirmation from the accountant of what we need to pay. It is far more than we had expected (my initial calculations are about CHF 600k. Originally we were expecting far less than this as early indications were that the TVA would be applied to turnover derived in resort – now it is ALL turnover."
FIDAG had on 27 October 2010 emailed Ms Farr:
"Everything that follows must seem terribly complicated to you, but the thing is that making English companies subject to VAT is completely new, nobody knows exactly how it's happening yet.
The VAT Division has altered its principles; this is what it means for you:
Your entire turnover is subject to Swiss VAT, because it is the place where the taxable service is supplied that it taxable (in your company, everything is about Verbier). A margin calculation no longer needs to be performed. You need to take your turnover from your financial statements and convert it into Swiss francs.
The rate has changed, however; it has been set at 2% (from 2005 onwards)"
By this time, Mr Norman was aware of the possibility of a tax warranty claim against the Defendants. As he emailed to Ms Farr
"On the years does it go back to 2007 as we may be able to claim from the seller under the tax warranties to reduce our exposure."
- the AFC was going back five years in its tax assessments, saying that any Revenue wherever it owns is subject to Swiss VAT, all SVL's revenue in the UK would be subject to TVA;
- "2% of turnover is the tax"; "got a tax guy on the case" SVL "will use Kuoni's tax adviser/legal adviser". A "heads up that there may be a tax warranty issue". "Kuoni are fighting the case + challenge the case".
Mr Norman's evidence was that the note was accurate apart from the fact that he did not recall saying that Kuoni was fighting the case.
"The Claim relates to a potential assessment to Swiss value added tax (tax sur la valeur ajoutée ("TVA")) by the Swiss tax authorities in respect of the activities of Ski Verbier Limited during the period 1 January 2005 to 31 December 2009, part of this period falling within the scope of the covenant contained at clause 2 of the Tax Deed. It is understood that there has already been quite significant discussion and correspondence between Mark Norman and Stewart Robertson in relation to the subject matter of the claim and the initial investigations carried out by our client into the technical merits of the potential assessment.
Ski Verbier Limited is a Subsidiary as defined for the purposes of the Tax Deed and therefore falls within the definition of 'Company' for the purposes of the covenant contained within the Tax Deed.
Although no formal assessment has yet been received from the Swiss Federal Tax Administration, the indication is that an assessment to TVA will be issued to Ski Veriber Limited shortly on the basis that there was a liability to TVA on all sales of Ski Verbier Limited in the period under consideration. There has been some discussion with the Swiss tax authorities as to the scope of the potential assessment and whether this should apply solely to incidental sales made in Switzerland and such as lift passes etc or to the all supplies (including that of the chalet accommodation). The position of the Swiss tax authorities is that the liability to TVA is due where the service is delivered (i.e. Verbier) and therefore it is understood that the assessment will be based upon the turnover of Ski Verbier Limited irrespective of the fact that almost all sales were concluded in the United Kingdom."
What is the effect of the notice provisions in the SPA and the Deed?
"5. Limitations
The Sellers shall not be liable under the covenants contained in clause 2 in respect of any Tax Liability to the extent that:
5.4 the Tax Liability arises or is increased as a direct result of a voluntary act of the Purchaser or the Company after Completion otherwise than
5.4.1 in the ordinary course of business of the Company; or
5.4.2 as required by any law or regulation of any competent authority; or
5.4.3 pursuant to any contract or other legally binding agreement entered into before Completion
which the Purchaser knew or ought to have known on the basis of information Disclosed would give rise to the Tax Liability in question…
5.6 unless (except in the case of fraudulent or negligent conduct) written notice of the Tax Liability or the Claim in respect thereof has been served on any of the Sellers on or before the expiry of seven years from the end of the accounting period current at Completion;
5.7 the Tax Liability is expressly excluded or limited by Part 5 of the Schedule to the Agreement, provided that, in the case of any conflict between the provisions of this clause 5 and Part 5 of the Schedule to the Agreement, the provisions of this clause 5 shall prevail."
It is common ground that clause 5.7 contains an error and should be construed to read (rather than "the Tax Liability is expressly excluded or limited by Part 5…") "the Sellers' liability is expressly excluded or limited by Part 5…").
"2. The Sellers shall not be liable in respect of any claim under the Warranties or under the Tax Deed unless it shall have been made in the case of the Tax Deed or the Tax Warranties before the expiry of 7 years from Completion and in the case of the Warranties (other than the Tax Warranties) before 31 March 2009.
3. No claim under the Warranties or under the Tax Deed shall be deemed to have been made unless notice of such claim was made in writing to the Sellers specifying in reasonable detail the event, matter or default to which the claim related and the nature of the breach and the amount claimed as soon as reasonably practicable but in any event within 30 days of the Purchaser or the Company becoming aware thereof."
Kuoni's case on construction.
(i) The time bar time limit in Part 5 is shorter; even the long-stop date (para 2) falls before the time limit in cl 5.6 which is later in 2014, and if knowledge had been obtained soon after the purchase, the time limit imposed by para 3 would have been little over a month from Completion.(ii) The time bar in Part 5 if it applied would exclude all claims under the Tax Deed, not just some.
(iii) The requirements for content of the notice are much more demanding under Part 5.
(iv) The notice under Part 5 must be served on all of the Sellers.
The Defendants' case on construction.
"It would in my judgment be quite wrong to approach this question of construction [that is, whether there was an inconsistency between the two relevant clauses] with any predisposition to find inconsistency between the special condition and cl 19 [of GAFTA form 119]. […]
On the other hand it is wrong to approach the contract on the assumption that there is no inconsistency. By including the inconsistency clause, the parties have acknowledged that there may be. One should, therefore, approach the documents in a cool and objective spirit to see whether there is inconsistency or not.
The judge found the arguments on this issue finely balanced, but concluded that there was no inconsistency as submitted by the buyers. I agree with his conclusion, but I have less hesitation in reaching it. It is a commonplace of documentary construction that an apparently wide and absolute provision is subject to limitation, modification or qualification by other provisions. That does not make the later provisions inconsistent or repugnant."
"Where the document has been drafted as a coherent whole, repugnancy is extremely unlikely to occur. The contract has, after all, to be read as a whole; and the overwhelming probability is that, on examination, an apparent inconsistency will be resolved by the ordinary processes of construction."
Decision on construction
"the ultimate aim of interpreting a provision in a contract, especially a commercial contract, is to determine what the parties meant by the language used, which involves ascertaining what a reasonable person would have understood the parties to have meant". The relevant "reasonable person" is "one who has all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the contract" (Rainy Sky para 14). He added at para 30"Where a term of a contract is open to more than one interpretation, it is generally appropriate to adopt the interpretation which is most consistent with business common sense".
Was notice given in time under Paragraph 3 of Part 5 of the Schedule to the SPA?
Kuoni's case on the time point.
The Defendants' case on the time point
Decision on the time point
Was the tax due?
"the AFC and the competent Swiss Administrative Court and Swiss Federal Supreme Court, if interpreting the meaning of permanent establishment and auxiliary and preparatory activities in the LTVA 2001 consider the definition used in Article 5 of the OECD Model Tax Convention on Income and Capital, Version July 2005 ("Convention")
and that in the light of this (Joint Report para 8):
"as per the relevant definition of the term 'permanent establishment', the following criteria must be met in order that in the Relevant Period the activity conducted by Ski Verbier in Verbier constituted a permanent establishment in Switzerland:
a. there must be a 'place of business in Verbier';
b. this place must be 'fixed';
c. there must be a business carried on in whole or in part through this fixed place of business; and
d. the activity must not be of merely ancillary or preparatory nature."
Thus if these criteria are not fulfilled, there will not be a permanent establishment in the relevant sense. The experts disagree whether or not these criteria are fulfilled in the present case. Although in a strict sense the role of the experts is to explain the law so that the Court can apply it to the facts, in reality, particularly in a tax dispute, I must choose between their competing views.
Kuoni's case on whether the tax was due.
Was the tax due? - the Defendants' case
Was the tax due? - Decision
Clause 5.4
"As a result of the changes in the VAT law … SVL was obliged to register for VAT as of 1st January 2010. This was because the place of supply of accommodation services was changed to the place of the real property. A registration as of that moment was mandatory. A registration based on the change of the law would create less discussion with the [AFC] about the situation in the past. Indeed, based on my experience it is more likely than not that the [AFC] would have registered SVL without analysing the past at all. Had this course been taken, therefore, the dispute with the AFC concerning SVL's historic VAT position may well not even have arisen."
Conclusion