BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
High Court of Ireland Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> McSweeney v. J.J Mooney [1997] IEHC 59; [1997] 3 IR 424; [1997] 2 ILRM 429 (6th April, 1997) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/1997/59.html Cite as: [1997] 3 IR 424, [1997] IEHC 59, [1997] 2 ILRM 429 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
1. The
issue that comes before the Court can be identified and summarised in the
following short form:-
2. The
reason for this provision is clear. The debt can never increase in value
though it may of course decrease. The most that the creditor can expect is to
be repaid. So, no Capital Gains Tax is payable upon the repayment of the debt.
3. In
the present case, the Respondent claims to have suffered an allowable loss and
so the Court is required to consider the nature of the transaction upon which
he suffered the loss so as to ascertain if the transaction is such as to take
it outside the provisions of Section 46. If the transaction was a simple debt,
then since no Capital Gains Tax would have been payable on its repayment, no
allowance can be claimed in respect of that loss arising from the transaction.
4. The
effect of this proviso is that while subsection 1 of Section 45, provides that
no chargeable gain shall accrue to the creditor on repayment of the loan, this
provision shall not apply where there is a "debt on a security".
5. Therefore,
the question that the Court has to decide is whether, in the circumstances of
the case, the loan which the Respondent paid was a "debt on a security" within
the meaning of the 1975 Act.
7. N
Limited commenced trading in 1975 and traded successfully until 1984 when
financial problems arose. Additional capital became a major requirement and
various financial institutions were approached. The Respondent, Mr. Noel
McSweeney, was Managing Director and major Shareholder of the company.
8. Negotiations
with financial institutions resulted in agreements executed in April/May 1985
whereby the financial institutions subscribed £250,000 in consideration of
250,000 £1 Cumulative, Convertible, Redeemable Shares with the right to
convert the Preference Shares into Ordinary Shares at a predetermined price for
Ordinary Shares.
9. The
above share subscription was subject to a contribution of £350,000 from
the shareholders by way of cash loans with the right of conversion into
Ordinary Shares at a predetermined price for each share. The cash loans were
not entitled to interest and repayment was subordinated to the redemption of
the preference shares and various other creditors including bank debts.
10. Special
Resolutions were passed by M Limited on 1st April, 1985 to increase its share
capital to provide for the issue of Cumulative, Convertible, Redeemable
Preference Shares and to accommodate any later conversion of the shareholder's
loan into Ordinary Share Capital.
12. The
instrument of loan was an instrument in writing which allowed the Respondent to
convert the loan into Ordinary Shares.
14. N
Limited was put into Court liquidation and the Respondent, Noel McSweeney
suffered a total loss of his loan of £140,000.
15. The
Respondent, Noel McSweeney made a chargeable gain on the sale of premises in
the year 5th April, 1986 and claimed an allowable loss by reason of the loss on
the £140,000 loan. This was refused on the grounds that the loan was no
more than a debt and did not qualify for relief.
17. The
question of what is meant by the words "a debt on security" has been considered
by the Courts of England and Scotland in a number of cases [
Cleveleys
Investment Trust Company -v- CIR
1975 47 TC300,
Aberdeen
Construction Co. Limited -v- CIR
1978 52TC 281,
WT
Ramsay Limited -v- CIR
1981 54TC 101 and
Taylor
Clarke International Limited -v- Lewis (Inspector of Taxes)
Simons Tax cases 1997 STC 499]. The headnote of the latter case states that
this case is authority for the proposition that:-
18. Having
considered the Judgment of Robert Walker J. I am not satisfied that the case is
authority for this proposition. If it is, then I respectively disagree with
it. In the earlier cases, it is clear that a number of eminent members of the
English and Scottish Bench have found difficulty in defining and identifying
the nature of a "debt on security". All have agreed, however, that it does not
mean simply "a debt which is secured" or, put another way, it is not the
opposite to an unsecured debt. I am in agreement with this view. I agree with
Lord Cameron when he said in
Cleveleys
Investment Trust Company -v- CIR
at p.318:-
19. In
my view, these are the elements which identify a debt on a security. This,
seems to me, to be no more than common sense. The pure loan is exempt from
Capital Gains Tax because it can never exceed in value. With the additional
rights to convert it into stock, a debt on a security may appreciate in value
and can be marketed at a profit. This is a clear distinction between the two.
20. I
am of the view that the four characteristics of a Loan on Security proposed to
be identified in
Taylors
case arise only because in separate cases transactions have been disallowed as
"Loans on Security" for these stated reasons, however, I do not believe that
these reasons of necessity identify what is and what is not a Loan on Security.
The essence of a Loan on Security must be whether the additional "Bundle of
Rights" acquired with the granting of the loan, to use Lord Wilberforce's
phrase, enhances the loan so as to make it marketable and potentially more
valuable than the value of the repaid loan upon repayment. This potential
increase in value must not be illusory or theoretical. It must be realistic at
the time when the loan and the rights are acquired by the lender.
21. I
am in no doubt that these elements can be identified in the present
transaction. Had he chosen to do so, the Respondent could have offered this
loan complete with its rights and entitlements on the market. While I
appreciate that the company was at the relevant time allying and that it might
have been difficult to find a buyer it was, nevertheless, possible that a buyer
would be found and would be prepared to offer a cash value for the loan which
was enhanced by the Respondent's right to shares. Given the number of
financial institutions which were prepared to participate in the funding of
this project and were prepared to accept it as a realistic business
proposition, it seems to me to be probable that this transaction was
marketable. I do not consider that it is relevant that a purchaser might have
difficulty in finding a purchaser, because this difficulty might arise by
reason of local or transient commercial considerations. Providing that the
transaction contained the characteristics which would, in the ordinary course
of commerce, render it marketable then, in my view, it meets the criteria.
22. An
argument has been advanced to me by Ms. Clohessy for the Applicant that all
that the Respondent ever had at any given time was either the right to
repayment of his loan or in the alternative shares. In otherwords, these two
entitlements did not and could not co-exist. If he exercised the right to
acquire the shares then the loan no longer existed. Unless he exercised the
right, all he had was the loan. Accordingly, she submits that he either had
the loan or the shares and never both. That being so, it is submitted that he
had no more than a debt, since he didn't exercise the right, which falls within
the provisions of Section 46.1 of the Act.
23. I
do not agree with this submission. To my mind, prior to the liquidation, the
Respondent had available to him the option of remaining a creditor of the
company
or
converting the loan into shares. This right, while it existed, potentially
commanded a market price over above the mere value of the loan on repayment and
it is this element which differentiates it from the mere loan.
24. I
do not accept that a difficulty in finding a potential purchaser on the market
is an element to be considered in determining if this is a debt on a security.
This difficulty may arise from a variety of different circumstances which
should not be allowed to trespass upon the validity of the characteristics
which identify a loan on security and differentiates it from a mere loan.
25. Accordingly,
I am satisfied that the provision of Section 46(1) of the Capital Gains Tax
Act, 1975 are relevant in the circumstances of this case. I find that the loan
in this case was a debt on a security and I am satisfied that the learned Trial
Judge was correct in the conclusion which he reached and I accordingly answer
the question posed in the affirmative.