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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Largo and Lundin Links Gas Co., Ltd v. Inland Revenue [1922] ScotLR 517 (24 June 1922) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1922/59SLR0517.html Cite as: [1922] ScotLR 517, [1922] SLR 517 |
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Page: 517↓
[Exchequer Cause.
Rule 3 of No. III of the rules applicable to Schedule A of the Income Tax Act 1918 provides as follows:—“In the case of ironworks, gasworks, salt springs or works, alum mines or works, waterworks, streams of water, canals, inland navigations, docks, drains or levels, fishings, rights of markets and fairs, tolls, railways and other ways, bridges, ferries, and other concerns of the like nature having profits from or arising out of any lands, tenements, hereditaments, or heritages, the annual value shall be understood to be the profits of the preceding year.” Section 18, subsections (2) and (3) of the Finance Act 1919 (9 and 10 Geo. V, cap. 32), provides, inter alia—“(2) In estimating the profits for any year of any of the concerns enumerated in Rules 1, 2, and 3 of No. III of the rules applicable to Schedule A, there shall be allowed to be deducted as expenses incurred in any year, on account of any mills, factories, or similar premises owned by the person carrying on the concern and occupied by him for the purposes of such concern, a deduction equal to one-sixth of the annual value of those premises. (3) Annual value for the purposes of this section shall be estimated according to the principles governing the estimation of the annual value for the purposes of Schedule A of mills, factories, and similar premises in the United Kingdom.”
Opinions per curiam that the annual value mentioned in the above section is to be estimated according to the principles which apply to ordinary lands or heritages occupied as a mill or a factory under No. I of Schedule A, i.e., the estimation is based on the rent, actual or valued, and not on the principles which govern the estimation of the annual value of the special and peculiar concerns enumerated in Rules 1, 2, and 3 of No. III of Schedule A.
Opinion reserved per Lord Cullen as to the method of valuation where the whole concern as distinguished from a part fell to be regarded as embracing nothing but mills or factories or similar premises.
The Income Tax Act 1918 (8 and 9 Geo. V, cap. 40) enacts—“First Schedule. Schedule A. No. I.— General Rule for estimating the annual value of lands, tenements, hereditaments or heritages,—In the case of all lands, tenements, hereditaments, or heritages capable of actual occupation, of whatever nature, and for whatever purpose occupied or enjoyed, and of whatever value (except the properties mentioned in No. II and No. III of this Schedule), the annual value shall be understood to be—(1) The amount of the rent by the year at which they are let, if they are let at rack-rent and the amount of that rent has been fixed by agreement commencing within the period of seven years preceding the fifth day of April next before the time of making the assessment; or (2) If they are not let at a rack-rent so fixed, then the rack-rent at which they are worth to be let by the year.… No. III.— .—(1) In the case of quarries of stone, slate, limestone, or chalk, the annual value shall be understood to be the profits of the preceding year. (2) In the case of mines of coal … and other mines, the annual value shall be understood to be the average amount for one year of the profits of the five preceding years: Provided that—… (3) [ Quoted supra].”
The Finance Act 1919 (9 and 10 Geo. V, cap. 32), sec. 18 (2) and (3) is quoted supra.
The Largo and Lundin Links Gas Company, Limited, appellants, being dissatisfied with a decision of the Commissioners for the General Purposes of the Income Tax Acts for the St Andrews Division of the County of Fife confirming an assessment to income tax made upon them on the sum of £435 under Schedule A of the Income Tax Acts for the year ending 5th April 1920, appealed by way of Stated Case. F.G.H. Smith, Inspector of Taxes, Cupar, was respondent.
The Case set forth, inter alia—“1. The following facts were admitted or proved:—(1) The appellants, the Largo and Lundin Links Gas Company, Limited, are a private limited liability company and were incorporated on 23rd October 1919. They have their registered office at Harbour Brae, Largo. (2) They carry on the manufacture of gas and as such are one of the concerns enumerated in Rule 3 of No. III of the rules applicable to Schedule A of the Income Tax Act 1918 (8 and 9 Geo. V, cap. 40). (3) They own property consisting of land, buildings, plant, machinery, pipes, &c., situated at Harbour Brae and elsewhere in Largo and Lundin Links, which they occupy and use for the purposes of and in connection with their gas works undertaking and on which they are assessed under Rule 3 of No. III of the rules applicable to Schedule A aforesaid. (4) Rule 3 of No. III of the rules applicable to Schedule A of the Income Tax Act 1918 reads as follows:—[ Quoted supra].
(5) In terms of that rule above quoted the annual value of the concern was adjusted subject to the deduction which is under dispute at
£435 0 0
Less adjustment of allowances for depreciation
219 0 0
leaving
£216 0 0
(6) Section 18, sub-sections (2) and (3), of the Finance Act 1919 (9 and 10 Geo. V, cap. 32) reads as follows:—[ Quoted supra]. (7) The appellants fall within sub-section (2) of section 18 of the Finance Act 1919 as a concern enumerated in Rule 3 of No. III of the rules applicable to Schedule A. 2. Mr J. Miller Thomson, W.S., Edinburgh, on behalf of the appellants contended—(1) That by virtue of the foregoing provisions of the Finance Act 1919 the appellants were entitled to a deduction from the assessment of one-sixth of the profits of the preceding year, which for the purposes of the present case the appellants claim to be one-sixth of £435, i.e., £72, 10s.; (2) that the whole heritable subjects occupied by the appellants as a gas works constituted one factory, each and every part of which was indispensable to the manufacture of gas and inseparable from the others; (3) That there is no principle to be found in the statute for ascertaining the annual value of a part of such a factory artificially separated from the parts which are in practice necessarily conjoined with it; and (4) that the only ‘principle governing the estimation of the annual value’ referred to in section 18 (3) of the Finance Act 1919 is that found in Rule 3 of No. III of the rules applicable to Schedule A of the Income Tax Act 1918. 3. The Inspector of Taxes (Mr F.G.H. Smith) on behalf of the Grown contended—(1) That the allowance granted by section 18 (2) of the Finance Act 1919 on account of ‘mills, factories, or similar premises’ did not extend to the appellants’ whole concern but was limited to those buildings which were similar in character to millsor factories, e.g., buildings containing moving plant and machinery and buildings ancillary thereto, but excluding services, mains, stores, &c., and also the gasholder which was purely plant, and which had already been the subject of wear and tear allowance; (2) that in terms of section 18 (3) of the Finance Act 1919 the annual value fell to be estimated according to the General Rule No. 1 of Schedule A and not according to Rule 3 of No. III of the rules applicable to Schedule A of the Income Tax Act 1918; and (3) that the appellants had furnished no information on which the allowance claimed might be accurately computed but from information derived from past accounts of the concern the annual value of the buildings might be taken at £120 (based on a cost of about £2000), and on these figures the allowance to which the appellants were entitled was £20.”
The questions for the opinion of the Court were—“(1) Whether the deduction allowed by section 18 (2) of the Finance Act 1919 falls to be calculated on the annual value of the whole concern of the appellants, or only on the annual value of such part of the premises as can be shown to be similar in character to mills or factories; and (2) Whether the annual value for the purposes of section 18 (2) of the Finance Act 1919, falls to be ascertained according to the General Rule No. 1 of Schedule A, or according to Rule 3 of No. III of the rules applicable to Schedule A of the Income Tax Act 1918.”
At advising—
Page: 519↓
By section 18 (2) of the Finance Act 1919 a further deduction with regard to the assessment of “the profits for any year of any of the concerns enumerated in Rules 1, 2, and 3 of No. III of Schedule A” is given. In the present case we are dealing particularly with a concern enumerated in Rule 3, but it is important to have regard to the nature of the concerns enumerated in all three rules. The direction is that in assessing those profits “there shall be allowed as expenses incurred in any year, on account of any mills, factories, or similar premises owned by the person carrying on the concern, and occupied by him for the purposes of such concern, a deduction equal to one-sixth of the annual value of those premises.” Before the Commissioners the Inspector of Taxes offered to concede the deduction of a figure representing one-sixth of the estimated annual value of certain parts of the appellant company's premises which he was willing to admit fell under the description of “mills, factories, or similar premises.” These parts he valued for the purposes of this proffered concession in the same way as ordinary mills, factories, or similar premises are valued for the purposes of Schedule A—that is, at their estimated rental. But the appellant company rejected this offer as being contrary to the Act, and contended that they were entitled to a deduction of one-sixth part of the assessed profits of the whole concern. This contention raises two points—(1) Are the appellant company's whole premises those of a mill or factory, or similar to the premises of a mill or factory, within the meaning of the Act of 1919? and (2) If so, is the annual value of their “premises” measured by the annual value of the profits of their “concern”? It is on these two points that the first and second questions put to us in the case substantially turn.
It is clear that the first point cannot be determined in this appeal. There are no materials in the case on which a determination of it can proceed; for it is in the first instance a question of fact, and no facts are found proved with regard to it. It is probably safe to say this much, that the property of any of the concerns enumerated in Rules 1, 2, and 3 of No. III of Schedule A may include a mill or a factory or premises ejusdem generis therewith—though it is unlikely as regards some of them; and further, that the property of some of them may conceivably consist wholly of premises of that character. But it is impossible to conclude from the bare circumstances that the appellant company's lands or heritages are of the kind ordinarily known as a gas-work, that they consist either wholly or partly of such premises. If in fact it consists only in part of such premises, the Act does not warrant an extension of the deduction beyond the annual value of that part.
The second point thus becomes really hypothetical. But as it was the subject of much argument I think I may express an opinion upon it. Assuming that the portions of the lands or heritages which the inspector was willing to admit fell under the description of mills, factories or similar premises had been proved to be of that character, the question is, on what principle the annual value of those portions should be estimated. Section 18 (3) of the Act of 1919 expressly provides that the annual value of such portion of the premises as consists of mill, factory, or something ejusdem generis, is to be “estimated according to the principles governing the estimation of the annual value for the purposes of Schedule A of mills, factories, and similar premises in the United Kingdom.” What are those principles? Plainly in my opinion they are not those which govern the estimation of the annual value of the special and peculiar concerns enumerated in Rules 1, 2, and 3 of No. III of Schedule A, but those which apply to ordinary lands or heritages occupied as a mill or a factory under No. I of Schedule A—in other words, the estimation is based on the rent, actual or valued.
In the circumstances of the case we cannot formally answer either of the questions put to us, and the appeal must be dismissed.
Page: 520↓
The second question is also hypothetical. As at present advised I am inclined to think that if the appellants' concern consists in part and in part only of a mill or factory, the annual value of that part for the purpose of the allowable deduction would fall to be estimated according to the general rule of Schedule A. I desire, however, to express no view as to the method of valuation on the alternative footing of the whole concern falling to be regarded as embracing nothing but mills or factories or similar premises.
The Court found that on the Case as stated they were unable to answer the two questions of law therein, and dismissed the appeal.
Counsel for Appellants— Wark, K.C.— Keith. Agents— J. Miller Thomson & Company, W.S.
Counsel for Respondent—The Solicitor-General ( Constable, K.C.)— Skelton. Agent— Stair A. Gillon, Solicitor of Inland Revenue.