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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> HM Revenue & Customs v Robert Gordon University [2008] ScotCS CSIH_22 (06 March 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSIH_22.html
Cite as: [2008] ScotCS CSIH_22, [2008] CSIH 22

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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Macfadyen

Lady Paton

Lord Penrose

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2008] CSIH 22

XA124/05

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD PENROSE

 

in

 

Appeal

 

under section 11 of the Tribunals and Inquiries Act 1992

 

by

 

THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS

Appellants;

 

against

 

THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE ROBERT GORDON UNIVERSITY

Respondents:

 

in respect of a decision of the VAT and Duties Tribunal for Scotland dated 1 November 2005 and communicated to the appellants on 2 November 2005

_______

 

Act: J.R. Campbell, Q.C.; Shepherd & Wedderburn LLP

Alt: Tyre, Q.C.; McGrigors LLP

 

 

6 March 2008

[1] By agreement dated 11 and 19 November 1996 (the "1996 Agreement") entered into between the Secretary of State for Scotland, acting through the National Health Service Management Executive, and the Robert Gordon University ("RGU"), RGU agreed to provide and to perform certain specified services related to the training of students in nursing and midwifery to standards that would lead to the award of a Diploma in Nursing or in Midwifery, or its equivalent, and that would lead also to registration with the United Kingdom Central Council for Nursing Midwifery and Health Visiting. It is agreed between the appellants, the Commissioners for Her Majesty's Customs and Revenue ("HMRC"), and RGU that the provision of those services under the 1996 Agreement constituted a supply for the purposes of Value Added Tax, and that the supply was an exempt supply in terms of item 1 of Group 6 of Schedule 9 to the Value Added Tax Act 1994, which implemented for domestic purposes Article 13A(1)(i) of the Directive 77/388, the Sixth Directive. So far as material, item 1 of Group 6 exempts from VAT:

"The provision by an eligible body of -

(a) education...; or

(b) vocational training".

RGU was at all material times an eligible body.

[2] By Assignation dated 24 and 27 May 2002, entered into between RGU and Univation Limited, it was provided:

"We, the Governors of the Robert Gordon University... in right of the Provider's part of the Agreement hereinafter assigned in consideration of the assumption of the obligations and liabilities under the said Agreement and with the consent and concurrence of the Scottish Ministers, as the successors of the Secretary of State for Scotland (hereinafter referred to as 'the Purchasers') do hereby assign, transfer and make over to and in favour of Univation Limited... (hereinafter referred to as 'the Assignees') the whole obligations to provide pre-registration nursing and midwifery education services and the right to receive sums due by the Purchaser (as defined in the Agreement aftermentioned) in relation thereto all in terms of the Agreement between the Secretary of State for Scotland and ourselves, the said The Governors of the Robert Gordon University dated Eleventh and Nineteenth November Nineteen hundred and ninety six, as extended to 31 August 2005... in relation to the provision of pre-registration nursing and midwifery education services (but excluding our whole rights to the Equipment and the Undertaking (as defined in the Agreement) which are retained by us, the said The Governors of the Robert Gordon University and are not transferred to the Assignees), together with by way of inclusion and not exclusion our whole right, title and interest in and to the Agreement to the extent aforementioned, including the right to receive sums due in terms of the condition 4.1 2 of the Agreement, and the obligations to provide the services set out in annex B to the Agreement; and that as from and after the first day of June 2002 (hereinafter referred to as 'the effective date')".

[3] Univation Limited has not at any time been an eligible body. It was at all material times a wholly owned subsidiary of RGU. Univation adopted its current objects by resolutions dated 12 July 1995 and 22 May 2001. Prior to 22 May 2001, its objects were, in brief, to carry on business as onshore and offshore engineering, scientific and management consultants and advisers, including research and development and other related activities. On 22 May 2001 it amended its objects to include: "business as a training provider". The company did not become an eligible body by extending the scope of its objects to include training or education. The training service it supplied generally, and in particular the services it undertook to supply in terms of the Assignation, could not constitute an exempt supply for VAT purposes.

[4] On 5 June 2002, RGU and Univation entered into an agreement (the "Services Agreement") for the supply by RGU to Univation of certain specified services relating to the implementation of Univation's obligations under the Assignation. The issue between the parties is whether the supply of services under the Services Agreement constituted the provision of education or training by RGU. HMRC contend that the proper characterisation of the whole services supplied is the provision of education. RGU contend that what is supplied comprises no more than a group of resources and facilities which Univation apply in the provision of education or training by the company under the 1996 Agreement as assigned to it.

[5] RGU and HMRC agreed the following findings in fact and invited the VAT and Duties Tribunal for Scotland ("the Tribunal") to adopt them:

"1 The Respondent ('the University') and the Secretary of State for Scotland entered into an Agreement, dated 11 and 19 November 1996 ('the 1996 Agreement'). The terms of said Agreement are as set out in the copy agreement at pages 52-89 of the Joint Bundle of Documents before the Tribunal.

1.1 The effect of the 1996 Agreement was that the University undertook the provision of certain nursing and midwifery teaching in North East Scotland, which had previously been carried out 'in-house' by the NHS. At the time of the formation of the 1996 Agreement, the Scottish Office did not wish any limited companies involved in the process of the provision of nurse education.

1.2 The University supplied nurse and midwife training to the Secretary of State for Scotland pursuant to this Agreement from 1996 to 2002.

2 Univation Ltd ('the Company') was formed by the University in 1995, as a wholly owned subsidiary to provide courses primarily to commercial clients.

2.1 The Company has no employees of its own, but is run by employees of the University. Approximately 20-30 employees are engaged almost full time on work carried out for the Company.

2.2 The Company has a Board of Directors comprising the Principal of the University, Mrs Patricia Briggs (the University's Finance Director, who gave evidence before the Tribunal), the University IT Director, the University's Vice Principal (Professor John Harper), the nurse contract manager and two external members, one from the oil industry and one from the local council. The Managing Director is Vivienne McKinley who has held that post from the Company's inception. She takes primary responsibility for the day to day management of the Company.

3 In 2001, the University decided to construct a new facility to house its Faculty of Health and Social Care (which includes the School of Nursing and Midwifery). As part of that process, it sought instructions from KPMG 'to advise on a VAT efficient structure for the construction and use of the new Faculty ...'. Certain of that advice is set out in a letter of 19 January 2001, and the advice involved a three Phase structure, of which the second was the Nurses Training Phase.

3.1 The Nurses Training Phase proposed by KPMG involved the adoption of what KPMG described as 'a more VAT efficient structure' for the delivery of pre-registration nurses training than that currently operated by the University. That advice was that the University assign its contract with the Scottish Executive to a wholly owned subsidiary so that the training will be liable to VAT at the standard rate, which would allow the University to recover VAT on related costs and improve VAT recovery on general overhead expenditure.

3.2 KPMG further advised: (i) that Univation may be a suitable vehicle 'as it already provides taxable training'; (ii) that it would 'still be necessary to have one or two individuals who are directly concerned in the nursing training contract employed by the training provider'; and (iii) that their understanding was that 'the transfer of undertaking legislation requires that all the employees will have to be notified of the changed arrangement'.

3.3 KPMG further advised that on the assumption that all staff remained as employees of the University it would be necessary to draw up contracts between the University and the nurse training provider for the provision of resources such as staff and the use of equipment. They added, '(It is the supply of such resources which would create increased taxable income for the University'.)

3.4 Following that decision by the University, the University assigned the 1996 Agreement to the Company with the approval of the Scottish Executive, and entered into a Services Agreement with the Company.

4 The terms of the Deed of Assignation, dated 24 and 27 May 2002 are as set out in the copy Deed at pages 14 to 17 of the Joint Bundle of Documents. The University retained its rights in the Equipment and the Undertaking. These terms are defined in the 1996 Agreement, Document 9, Annex A, paragraph 1.26 and paragraph 10 (pp. 59 and 66-68 of the Joint Bundle).

5 The terms of the Services Agreement dated 5 June 2002 between the University and the Company are as set out in the copy Agreement in Document 6 of the Joint Bundle (pp. 18-39).

6 Despite the terms of the 2002 Agreements, the University continues to hold itself out in certain documents as the provider of the relevant nursing and midwifery courses. See (i) the extract from its website, produced as page 345 of the Joint Bundle of Documents; (ii) the 9 January 2004 press release issued by the University which states 'RGU is the sole provider in the North of Scotland for a wide range of pre and post registration nursing courses ...' page 450 of the Joint Bundle; and the literature of CATCH (Centralised Applications to Nursing & Midwifery Training Clearing House) and NHS Scotland. The website extract at page 345 describes the role of the Company. NHS Scotland is aware of the arrangement between the University and the Company.

7 At the time of the Assignation, the Scottish Executive was concerned that, from the students' point of view, nothing should change in the provision of the relevant courses.

8 The University and the Company distinguish two different means of delivering services rendered by the former to the latter. Where the Company's contract with its client places students on existing University courses, that is treated as a supply of education by the University. Where the course is designed specifically to meet the needs of a client of the Company, that is treated as a supply of staff and resources by the University.

9 All students attending the courses in question are matriculated students of the University in the same manner as they were prior to the Agreements of 2002. They apply for places through the Centralised Applications to Nursing & Midwifery Training Clearing House (CATCH), as they did prior to the 2002 Agreements. If successful in their courses their awards are made by the University. From the point of view of the students, nothing has changed as a result of the 2002 Agreements. They are still taught the same courses, by the same staff, in the same premises, and receive the same awards as they would have received had the 2002 Agreements not been entered into and their perception is that they are trained by the University.

10 The content of the nursing and midwifery courses in question continued to be determined centrally, after the 2002 Agreements, as it had been prior to those agreements.

11 The University undertakes essential quality control measures in relation to the nursing and midwifery courses, as it is the University which makes the awards to the students at the end of their courses.

12 The management of the nursing and midwifery courses is primarily undertaken by the University's Head of School, Jennie Parry, who reports to Professor Harper. Jennie Parry also deals on a day to day basis with the Scottish Executive in relation to the operation of the contract for the provision of nursing and midwifery courses. Since the 2002 Agreements no circumstance has arisen which has necessitated Jennie Parry to refer any issues to the Board of the Company.

13 A written report is prepared for the Board of the Company once a quarter, and every six months or so, Jennie Parry, the Head of the School of Nursing and Midwifery of the University attends a Meeting of the Board of the Company to present papers. Jennie Parry does not hold any formal position within the Company and, in particular, is not a member of the Board of Directors.

14 If the Scottish Ministers were dissatisfied with the provision of nursing and midwifery education under the 1996 Agreement they would look to the Company for a remedy and not to the University.

15 The Company has a lease of part of the Faculty of Health and Social Care Building on the University campus.

16 The Company makes a profit which is gifted to the University to avoid any liability to tax arising on the profit.

17 The content of the letter of 22 January 1999 from the Respondents' Policy Directorate to the Director of Finance at the Scottish Office Department of Health (Joint Bundle, pages 203/4) was known to the University's Finance Director prior to entering into the 2002 Agreements. The University took into account the contents of the letter and advice from KPMG before entering into the arrangements. Despite the terms of that letter, the University (a) took no steps to ascertain the precise content of the arrangements being discussed therein, and (b) did not discuss the proposed arrangements (which became the 2002 Agreements) with HMC&E prior to entering those agreements."

[6] The Tribunal made those findings in fact, and, in addition, at the request of RGU, made the following further findings in fact:

"1. The relationship between the University and the Company operates in practice in accordance with the terms of the Agreement.

2. Jennie Parry reports to Professor Harper (finding 12) 'as a Director of the Company'.

3. The Board of the Company exercises general control and direction over the staff who are providing services under the Agreement through its directors Mrs Briggs (in relation to commercial and financial aspects) and Professor Harper (in relation to academic aspects)."

HMRC contend that the Tribunal was not entitled to make those additional findings: in so far as they were facts at all, HMRC contend that they were facts which no reasonable Tribunal, properly directing itself, could find in light of the evidence before it. HMRC further submitted that, in so far as they were facts, the findings failed to support the RGU's position. They submitted that these findings were considerably influenced by the Tribunal's mind set that this case could be decided on: (1) the contractual form of the transactions; (2) the fact that Univation had "a commercial purpose"; and (3) that the only "artificiality" was the concept that exempt education could only be supplied by selected eligible bodies.

[7] HMRC made detailed submissions in support of these general propositions. It was submitted that Additional Finding in Fact 1 was not a "fact". It was at best an assertion by the Tribunal that followed from its decision that the RGU was supplying staff and administrative services. It could not be a fact that led to that decision, as it was itself based on assertions made by Mrs Briggs about the Agreement and how it worked that required an acceptance of RGU's position to be validated. To that extent, it was submitted that the finding should be disregarded. In any event, in other cases parties had no doubt done what they professed to do in their written contracts, but that had not been determinative of the VAT analysis of the transactions involved. Additional Finding of Fact 2 was said to be based on Mrs Briggs' evidence (reported at page 17 of the transcript) that "Jenny Parry reports to John Harper on the day to day operation of the contract". Although Professor Harper was a director of Univation, he was also a vice principal of RGU and responsible for the management of the nursing contracts and therefore, it was submitted, Fact 2 was only valid once the Tribunal had found for RGU. It was again a finding that followed from the decision rather than informing it. As both Harper and Parry were employed by RGU in roles where the reporting lines would be the same if they were acting in their university roles, the comments made by Mrs Briggs could at best be viewed as no more than an assertion. In any event, on the Appellants' view that what the Respondent was doing involved the supply of education to Univation, the fact of Parry reporting to a director of that company was in no way determinative of the nature of the supply. Additional Finding in Fact 3 was again no more than an assertion, which depended on a decision by the Tribunal that RGU's analysis was correct. Finally, the Tribunal had failed to address the issues arising from Mrs Briggs' acceptance of a clear distinction between those situations in which Univation bought education from RGU, and those in which it purported to buy in the services of staff of RGU. In like manner, the Tribunal wholly failed to address the issues arising from the question of control of the teaching staff on the courses concerned. Finally, it was submitted that the additional findings were fundamentally flawed in that they were clearly circular: the decision relied on the findings, but the findings could only be valid once the decision was made that RGU was correct.

[8] For RGU it was argued that there was a basis in the evidence led for the additional findings, in particular in the evidence of Mrs Briggs, that RGU had clearly been entitled to ask the Tribunal to make those findings and that the Tribunal was clearly entitled to make them. In our opinion the Tribunal was entitled to make the additional findings. They reflected the terms of Mrs Briggs' oral testimony, and her credibility and reliability as a witness were not challenged by HMRC. Parties' submissions in this appeal must be considered in the light of the Tribunal's findings as a whole.

[9] The parties lodged extensive written submissions for the purposes of the hearing of the appeal. In the circumstances a brief resume only of their respective contentions is required to indicate the scope of the debate. HMRC contended that in essence RGU had "mislabelled" the services supplied to Univation in an attempt to present the supply by the Respondent to Univation as one of "taxable services". It adopted the form of these transactions to escape from the strictures applying to exempt supplies of education and so increase the university's scope for the recovery of input tax. It was not disputed by HMRC that a genuine provision of services that fell outwith the scope of the exemption would be effective. However, it was submitted that, the contract and assertions made notwithstanding, what RGU did in relation to the nurses' training courses in question had not changed in any material respect: RGU still supplied exempt education, albeit to Univation rather than the Scottish Ministers. The artificial dissection or deconstruction of a supply of education into a shopping list of the ingredients (i.e. goods and services) that routinely comprised such a supply, did not make them "independent services": it was a deliberately artificial representation of the supply, made in an attempt to disguise its true character to gain a VAT advantage without actually changing its modus operandi as far as nurses' training was concerned. The Tribunal had misunderstood HMRC's position. In particular the Tribunal had proceeded on the misconception that once it was accepted that there had been an actual supply by RGU to Univation one needed to look no further than the written contract to ascertain the character of the supply for VAT purposes. It was necessary to have regard to the realities of the relationship, and the true character of what RGU supplied.

[10] RGU argued that the correct analysis of the relationship between the university and Univation had to begin from the written documents. It was not disputed that the terms of the parties' contract were not determinative of the correct VAT analysis, but the contractual analysis was nevertheless of considerable significance. In this case, there was no reason to depart from the terms of the parties' contractual rights and obligations in characterising for VAT purposes what was supplied by RGU to Univation. That was the submission which the Tribunal accepted and they were correct in so doing. The contractual arrangements were not a sham or a dissimulation. There was ample evidence in the documentation, and in the oral testimony of Mrs Briggs, that RGU supplied staff and administrative services, and not education, to Univation. The principle of neutrality was critical to the operation of VAT: tax borne should be recoverable until there was a supply to the ultimate consumer - or to a person who used what was supplied to make exempt supplies. And it must not matter how many links there were in the chain. In determining the treatment for VAT purposes of a particular supply in a chain of supplies, it was necessary to consider each link separately. It was not permissible to take a "global view" and be influenced by the character of another transaction further down the chain. A strict view must be taken of what constituted a supply of education for VAT purposes. Where, as here, there was a single stage at which teaching took place, there should in principle be only one supply of "education" for VAT purposes. In the present case (as was not in dispute), that supply was made by Univation. It was a supply made to the Scottish Executive, in terms of the assigned contract originally entered into by RGU, of education provided to nursing students. It would offend against the scheme of VAT if the exemption for education were to be applied to a link in the chain other than the one where consideration was paid for teaching. The supply of education by Univation to the Scottish Executive was not exempt in terms of the UK legislation because Univation was not an "eligible body" as defined in Value Added Tax Act 1994, Sch 9, Group 6, note (1). But if it was, there would be two transactions being exempted from VAT because of a single act of teaching. That could not be right and would offend against the neutrality principle. In the present case, therefore, the proper analysis, looked at from the point of view of Univation, was that they received the range of services specified in their contract with RGU which they required in order to enable them in turn to fulfil their obligations to the Scottish Executive. What RGU supplied was not education.

[11] It is a matter of agreement between parties that the proper characterisation of the supplies made under the Services Agreement depends upon the analysis of the essential characteristics of the transaction, and that the terms of the documents are not determinative of the issue. It was not disputed by RGU that had the services been provided in terms that mirrored as closely as might be the terms of the 1996 Agreement, characterisation of RGU's supply as the provision of education might have been irresistible. HMRC for their part did not contend that if, on a proper analysis of the arrangements, the aggregate of the elements of the supply by RGU omitted crucial elements of the provision of education or training, RGU's supplies would not be exempt.

[12] It is clear from the Tribunal's findings in fact that, before the 1996 Agreement came into effect, Grampian, Orkney and Shetland Health Boards provided pre-registration and post-registration nursing and midwifery education in the relevant area. In terms of clause 4.1 of the Agreement it was an essential and material condition of the 1996 Agreement that RGU took over as a going concern the Health Boards' business of the provision of post-registration and continuing nursing and midwifery education (the "Business" in terms of the Agreement), and continued to provide that education for a period of at least a year from 25 October 1995. The present dispute relates to pre-registration education services provided in terms of clause 1 of the 1996 Agreement which was in these terms:

"The Provider [RGU] shall provide and perform the services specified in Annex B - Specification to this Agreement on the terms and conditions specified in, and in accordance in all respects with the provisions and requirements of, the terms and conditions of contract set out in Annex A..."

[13] Annex A provided definitions for the purposes of the 1996 Agreement, of which the following are material:

"1.9 'Courses' means the educational courses by which pre-registration nursing and midwifery education is conducted and carried out by or on behalf of the Provider as part of the Services...

1.12 'The NBS' means the National Board for Nursing, Midwifery and Health Visiting for Scotland, a body established by the Nurses, Midwives and Health Visitors Act 1979...

1.14 'Provider' means the Robert Gordon University and includes the Robert Gordon University's personal representatives, successors and permitted assignees, subcontractors, sublessees or other transferees...

1.18 'The Services' means the pre-registration nursing and midwifery education services and other services, all as specified in annex B to the contract...

1.26 'Undertaking' means the department, section, organisation or part of the Grampian, Orkney and Shetland Health Boards which, prior to the Services Commencement Date, provides pre-registration nursing and midwifery education services similar to those specified in this document at its premises at the Foresterhill College of Nursing & Midwifery."

[14] Clause 7 of Annex A to the 1996 Agreement provided that RGU should engage, employ and where necessary train staff qualified to carry out its obligations and duties as provider under the contract. In terms of clause 8 of Annex A the Secretary of State and RGU agreed:

"8.1.1 that the Undertaking is an undertaking, and their entering into the Contract gives rise to a relevant transfer of an undertaking, for the purposes of the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 1981;"

[15] The Clause made detailed provisions to secure compliance with the TUPE Regulations. Clause 10 provided for the transfer to RGU of the equipment and furniture in use for the provision of the Services up to the Services Commencement date (1 December 1996). Clause 10 also provided for the onward transfer of equipment and furniture in use at the termination of the contract.

[16] Clause 16 provided for assignation, inter alia. Clause 16.2 provided:

"No assignation, sub-contracting, sub-letting or other transfer of any duty, function, liability, obligation or responsibility (or any part thereof) incumbent upon the Provider in terms of the Contract to any third party by the Provider shall have the effect of relieving it of any such duty, function, liability, obligation or responsibility (or any part thereof) owed to the Purchaser in terms of the contract, notwithstanding that the Purchaser has consented to such assignation, sub-contracting, sub-letting or other transfer, and the Provider shall at all times be bound to fully implement the Contract jointly and severally with the person with whom it has entered into an assignation, sub-contract or other transfer as aforesaid."

[17] In terms of Annex B to the 1996 Agreement RGU was obliged to provide courses leading to the award of the Diploma of Higher Education in Nursing or Midwifery or its equivalent, and which also lead to Registration with the United Kingdom Central Council for Nursing, Midwifery and Health Visiting. The numbers of students to be accommodated were prescribed, and payment terms were set out. The expression "courses", was defined in Annex A as meaning "the educational courses by which pre-registration nursing and midwifery education is conducted and carried out by or on behalf of the Provider [the University] as part of the Services." In terms of Annex B the courses had to be approved by the National Board for Nursing Midwifery and Health Visiting for Scotland and to be in accordance with certain other requirements; to be validated by an appropriate award-giving body to a specified level; and to meet certain other requirements. RGU was obliged to ensure that the curriculum was reviewed and developed on an ongoing basis and that it was in accordance with changes in health care, always subject to the approval of the NBS: paragraph 2.

[18] Pausing at this point, a number of features of the arrangements between the Secretary of State and RGU appear to have been clearly understood by the parties. The local Health Boards had had an established educational facility providing pre-registration education and training appropriate to the education and training of candidates for the nursing and midwifery vocations, with appropriate premises, equipment, and staff. RGU agreed to take over that business, and to continue to run it, providing courses designed to lead to the award of relevant, duly validated diplomas, and registration with the UK Central Council, always subject to the on-going approval of NBS, a statutory body. The agreement of parties that so long as RGU continued to implement the contract it was providing education reflects the reality of the position that emerges from the documents.

[19] The Assignation, as already noted, excluded from the transfer to Univation RGU's "whole rights to the Equipment and the Undertaking (as defined in the Agreement)". Given the terms of Clause 10 of the 1996 Agreement the exclusion of the equipment was understandable: it, or its replacements, had to be available for onward transfer if the 1996 Agreement were terminated. As set out in paragraph [13] above, the "Undertaking" meant the department, section, organisation or part of the Grampian, Orkney and Shetland Health Boards which, prior to the Services Commencement Date, provided pre-registration nursing and midwifery education services similar to those specified in the 1996 Agreement. That undertaking was the subject of a TUPE transfer to RGU, complete with the transfer of the contracts of employment of related employees and pension transfer arrangements broadly comparable to those applicable prior to the transfer. The exclusion of the undertaking, as it stood at the date of the Assignation, indicates that the effect of the assignation was intended to be that RGU would, so far as it was capable of procuring such a result, transfer its obligations under the 1996 Agreement to Univation, without transferring to the company any of the human and other resources required for the implementation of the obligations it was taking over. The "business" of provision of pre-registration training was retained by RGU. It is agreed between parties that Univation had and has no employees of its own. The Assignation did not put Univation in a position in which it was capable of performing the duties and obligations it had undertaken, and it had no resources of its own with which to perform those duties and obligations. RGU retained those resources for the purposes of its own undertaking of the provision of pre-registration training and education of nursing and midwifery students which it excluded from the transfer.

[20] Having regard to the terms of Clause 7 of Annex A to the 1996 Agreement which required the provider to engage, employ and where necessary train staff qualified to carry out its obligations and duties under the contract, the situation created by the Assignation, viewed in isolation, appears somewhat contrived, but it is clear that it was never intended to be a free-standing agreement and was dependent on the execution of a further agreement between RGU and Univation, the Services Agreement.

[21] The Services Agreement narrated that Univation (the "Customer") wished to appoint RGU (the "Supplier") to carry out the "Services" on the terms of the Agreement, and that RGU had agreed to accept appointment. In terms of clause 2.1 RGU was obliged to provide the Services in accordance with the agreement "and the Agreed Terms" set out in part 4 of the Schedule. The definition of the "Services" was therefore central to the issue. The definition was:

"'Services' means such of the following services as the Customer requires, as detailed in the Schedule:

(1) the Additional Services;

(2) the Administrative Services; and

(3) the Staff Services."

Superficially, at this initial level, it appears that the content of the supply was not defined by the agreement: it depended on subsequent specification by Univation of its requirements.

[22] The Agreed Terms included provisions related to the quality of the provision of the Services. Paragraph 3.2.1. of part 4 of the Schedule obliged RGU at all times to exercise all reasonable skill and care in the provision of the Services "commensurate with that expected of an experienced provider of services similar to the Services". Paragraph 3.2.3. required RGU to maintain professional indemnity insurance and to ensure that contractors and consultants also maintained such insurance. Paragraph 3.2.4. required RGU to observe any specific written instructions from Univation in relation to the provision of the Services. Paragraph 3 further provided:

"3.4 The Supplier shall keep the Customer fully informed as to which directors, employees or consultants of the Supplier have responsibility on a day-to-day basis for the provision of the Services under this Agreement.

3.5 The supplier shall procure that such directors, employees and consultants devote such of their time, attention and skill as shall be necessary for the proper provision of the Services by the Supplier under this Agreement."

[23] Paragraph 8 of Part 4 governed "Employment matters". It provided:

"8.1. The Employees shall remain in the employment of the Supplier for all purposes and the Supplier shall be responsible for all salaries, remuneration, expenses, bonuses, emoluments, the provision of benefits and all other liabilities and costs arising out of the employment of the employees including the deduction and administration of such taxes and NI contributions as are recoverable thereon.

8.2 For the purpose only of assisting in the provision of the Services the Supplier hereby delegates to the Customer the following in relation to the Employees:

8.2.1. the authority to supervise and manage the performance of the Services; and

8.2.2. the authority to give lawful instructions pursuant to the provision of the Services.

8.3 In the event the Customer shall have cause to be dissatisfied by the conduct or capability of any of the Employees it shall submit a full report of its concerns to the Supplier, and the Supplier shall take such action as in the absolute discretion of the Supplier it shall deem appropriate."

[24] The expressions "Additional Services" and "Administrative Services" were defined in clause 1 of the Services Agreement by reference respectively to parts 2 and 1 of the Schedule. There was no reference to the "Staff Services" in the definition clause, and therefore no formal bridge between the body of the agreement and Part 3 of the Schedule unless it be in the definition of "Employees" which term was said to mean "the employees of the Supplier detailed in Part 3 of the Schedule". Part 1 defined in an apparently comprehensive way the non-teaching services to be provided, including student registration; student welfare services; student access to the courses; all facilities such as student union and sports facilities; all necessary administration services; all library and IT services; and the ongoing monitoring of the delivery of the services. Part 2 specified the Additional Services as "The provision of all such additional Services to the Customer as may be agreed in writing between the Customer and the Supplier from time to time". Part 3 stated: "The Supplier shall make available to the Customer (in accordance with the terms of paragraph 8 of Part 4 of the Schedule) such staff of such grade as the parties shall from time to time consider appropriate for the provision of the Services."

[25] RGU accept that the terms of the Services Contract are not determinative of the correct VAT analysis: C&E Commissioners v Reed Personnel Services Ltd [1995] STC 588. They contend, however, that the contractual analysis is nevertheless of considerable significance. In appropriate circumstances the contractual analysis may be determinative of the VAT analysis, as illustrated in HMRC v Debenhams Retail plc [2005] STC 1155. Mance LJ observed at para 47: "The domestic contractual position is, in other words, not just the starting point, but also the finishing point", on the Court's preferred hypothesis in that case. In our view, the parties' contractual rights and obligations are, properly, the starting point for an analysis of the transactions entered into. However, in the present case, it is clear that the contractual provisions are, in themselves, incapable of determining the nature of the supply for VAT purposes.

[26] The definition provisions relating to the "Services" are circular and inconclusive as to the scope of the obligations of RGU to Univation. It was contended for RGU that the contract was written for the parties and not for HMRC: it was clear to the parties what was required in order for the Agreement to be implemented. Mr Tyre accepted that different issues might arise should RGU and Univation be in dispute as to the scope of their respective rights and obligations. Up to a point that must be so. However, it is clear in this case that the parties did not require any fresh written agreement to identify the resources required to implement the obligations transferred to Univation. The obligations under the 1996 Agreement were known facts. The written agreements were required because the parties sought to represent the reality of their relationship in a particular way. And in that context, the written documents could be conclusive if and only if they were intelligible and pointed conclusively to the result desiderated. That result depended on two complementary propositions: what was supplied by RGU to Univation was a bundle of resources, human and material, and no more; and that supply did not constitute the provision of education to the nursing and midwifery students enrolled by the University.

[27] In order to make sense of Part 3 of the Schedule to the Services Agreement, RGU argued that the reference there to "Services" should be read as a reference to the services defined in the 1996 Agreement. That necessarily involved giving the term a meaning different from that found in the main agreement and in other parts of the Schedule. It is clear that, whether or not additional services were in fact provided, the services to be supplied to Univation had to be understood to include services yet to be identified and specified at the date of the Services Agreement and could not properly be defined by reference only to the 1996 Agreement. There are further difficulties in attempting to treat the written documents as definitive of the parties' relationships. The Staff Services, which on any view had to be central to the supply of teaching services, were not defined at all. The expression: "such staff of such grade as the parties shall from time to time consider appropriate for the provision of the Services" left the specification of teaching and administrative staff for determination by independent agreement.

[28] It is plain that the objective of RGU and Univation could be achieved only if, on a sound construction of their arrangements, it was not intended that RGU should supply Univation with all of the services specified in the 1996 Agreement, but a selection only of those services that omitted identifiable core obligations central to the characterisation of the supply as the provision of education. One can identify omissions from the written agreements that reflected the parties' aims. As already noted, for example, Clause 7 of Annex A to the 1996 Agreement required the provider to engage, employ and where necessary train staff qualified to carry out its obligations and duties under the contract. Paragraph 8.1.of part 4 of the Schedule to the Services Agreement provided that the relevant employees would remain in the employment of RGU for all purposes. The provision of teaching staff was on any view a core activity. There was no express reference to their training. Another area was the provision of equipment for the due performance of the 1996 Agreement. As already noted the exclusion of the equipment from the Assignation was intelligible, given the obligations incumbent on RGU at termination of the Agreement. However, maintaining suitable equipment for the delivery of the education and training specified in the 1996 Agreement was another core activity comprised in the definition of the services to be supplied.

[29] There are deficiencies in the Services Agreement in relation to equipment. There is a definition of "Equipment" as "any and all such equipment as is required by the Supplier to carry out the Services as specified in the Schedule". However, there is no operative express obligation to provide the equipment or otherwise make it available for the purposes of supplying the services. Paragraph 9 of Part 1 of the Schedule provides for the ongoing maintenance and care and, where required, the repair of all items of the equipment during the term of the agreement. The agreed facts include, in paragraph 4, a statement that RGU "retained its rights" in the equipment, reflecting the terms of the Assignation, but do not include any agreed fact relating to its use. However, this appears to be another example of poor drafting rather than a matter of substance. There would be no point at all in providing for the maintenance repair and replacement of the equipment if it were not made available under the Services Agreement. But this is a further example of the need to rely on material not included in the express terms of the Services Agreement in characterising the supply. If it were not correct to imply a term binding RGU to provide or make available the equipment to Univation, then the result would be provision by RGU, to the exclusion of Univation, of equipment central to the provision of nursing training. But that would imply that Univation was in a position to service its obligations to the Scottish Executive without access to the equipment. At this stage it would be impossible to avoid a sense of artificiality in the arrangements. In the circumstances it must be concluded that RGU was intended to provide the equipment to Univation.

[30] However, it follows that it is not possible to treat the parties' written agreements in this case as determinative of the character of the transactions. It is necessary to look to the whole circumstances, including the documents, to arrive at a decision on the central issue: how properly to characterise for the purposes of item 1 of Group 6 the supply which both parties agree RGU made to Univation. It is appropriate at this point to return to the issues raised by two of the additional findings in fact made by the Tribunal. A finding in fact that the relationship between RGU and Univation "operates in practice in accordance with the terms of the Agreement" cannot resolve the central issue, nor can it be material to its resolution, if the terms of the agreement do not define the parties' rights and obligations without reference to external facts and circumstances. The same applies to the third additional finding: nothing in the agreement is apt to identify the staff who were providing services under the agreement. In the context of VAT, reference to staff providing services is particularly inept.

[31] The starting point in discussing the central issue between parties is now to be found the opinion of the Advocate General and the decision of the Court in Stichting Regionaal Opleidingen Centrum Noord-Kennemerland/West Friesland (Horizon College) Case C-434-05, 14 June 2007, unreported. That case was not available to the Tribunal. From that case it appears that the supply of teaching staff by one educational establishment to another for the recipient to apply in the presentation of its own courses is not the provision of education but a supply of services falling outwith the scope of Article 13A(1)(i). The Advocate General said at paragraph 49:

"When one educational establishment makes teachers available to another such establishment, where they teach the latter's students under its instructions and responsibility, the supply made by the first establishment is not of 'education' but of teaching staff. And, as the Commission pointed out at the hearing, the 'education, vocational training or retraining' which students receive in an educational establishment is not merely what is provided by teachers from their own knowledge and skills. Rather, it includes the whole framework of facilities, teaching materials, technical resources, educational policy and organisational infrastructure within the specific educational establishment in which those teachers work."

[32] Neither party contended that the final sentence was intended to define exclusively or exhaustively the expression "education, vocational training or retraining". And the Court of Justice did not approach the issue on that basis. The Court's opinion states:

"17 There is no definition in Article 13A(1)(i) of the Sixth Directive of the various forms of education covered by that provision.

18 Admittedly, as Horizon College essentially submits, the transfer of knowledge and skills between a teacher and students is a particularly important element of educational activity.

19 However, ..., the fact that such a transfer is taking place is not, by itself, sufficient for the mere supply of a teacher to an educational establishment, for the purpose of carrying out teaching duties under the responsibility of that establishment, to be described as educational activity.

20 Indeed, as the Commission submitted, in essence, at the hearing, the educational activity referred to in Art. 13A(1) (i) of the Sixth Directive consists of a combination of elements which include, along with those relating to the teacher/student relationship, also those which make up the organisational framework of the establishment concerned.

21 However, ... according to the terms of the placement contracts at issue in the main proceedings, it was for the host establishment to define the duties of the teacher concerned, having regard to the duration of the placement and the role assigned to that teacher at Horizon College. In addition the host establishment was required to insure the teacher for the period of his or her placement.

22 Accordingly, the making available of a teacher to the host establishment in such circumstances cannot be regarded, of itself, as an activity capable of being covered by the terms 'education', within the meaning of Art. 13A(1) (i) of the Sixth Directive. As the Greek and Netherlands Governments and the Commission essentially contend, the contract concluded between Horizon College, the host establishment and the teacher concerned aims, at most, simply to facilitate the provision of education by the host establishment.

23 That interpretation is not affected by the circumstance ... that the body which makes the teacher available is itself, in common with the host establishment, an educational establishment for the purposes of Art. 13A(1)(i) of the Sixth Directive. Where a particular activity is not in itself covered by the term 'education', the fact that it is provided by a body governed by public law that has an educational aim, or by another organisation defined by the Member State concerned as having similar objects, cannot alter that analysis."

[33] It is not possible in this case to characterise the services supplied by RGU to Univation as a "mere" supply of one or more teachers. Nor can the supply be characterised as "at most, simply to facilitate the provision of education" by Univation. On any view, the supply to Univation was much more comprehensive in its scope than the supply considered in Horizon College. There was a combination of elements in the supply. The question is whether, as the law is now to be understood, the Tribunal was entitled to conclude that that combination in the circumstances did not amount to the provision of education by RGU. The Tribunal adopted an approach that could not have been and was not informed by the decision in Horizon College. In a number of respects the Tribunal's approach cannot be reconciled with the authorities, including Horizon College.

[34] The Tribunal's decision was expressed in these terms:

"There was nothing unreal or inessential about any of the features here. There is indeed no artificiality created by the Company structure. The artificiality if any is introduced by the concept of exempt supplies of education being supplied and only supplied by selected 'eligible' bodies.

 

The Tribunal considered the statement by the Commissioners that they did not contend that they were attacking an avoidance scheme to be basic and fundamental. If it is accepted that there was no artificiality about the economic activity said to be undertaken and that supplies were in fact made by the Appellant to the Company and by the Company to the Scottish Executive 'artificiality' plays little part in the analysis of the transaction itself.

 

If by organising transactions in a particular way an overall benefit in relation to taxation can be achieved that does not make these transactions unreal or artificial. 'Commercial reality' would demand that the most tax efficient method of operation should be adopted. In any event plenty good sound commercial reasons can be envisaged for a division between the University and the Company. There is significantly an advantage in relation to liability for legal proceedings. The liability of the Company is limited. The liability of the University, probably not. That consideration applies to the whole of the commercial enterprises undertaken by Univation.

 

Further the Company does not 'supplant' the Appellant in the teaching of nursing studies and granting of degrees and plays no part therein. Its function is to provide training to the Scottish Executive in fulfilment of the contract with the Scottish Executive. It also provides intellectual services to other entities as and when required.

 

The analysis of the appellant is in our view correct. We follow their argument. There is no supply of education to the Company. In other words the supply to the Company is that for which they pay their consideration, which is administration and staff services. The supply by the Company to the Scottish Executive, although not strictly relevant, is of training and would be and is education albeit that has no tax effect since the Company is not an eligible provider. It might even be said that constructed in this way the true concept of VAT is followed through. The University supplies a taxable service, the Company supplies a taxable service. These are not distorted by any considerations of exempt supplies and the Company accounts for the VAT it receives and deducts the VAT it pays. Nothing is artificial in that."

[35] In the first two paragraphs of its decision, the Tribunal reflects a failure to deal with the argument presented by HMRC. The dispute between the parties was not concerned with the question whether there was a supply by RGU to Univation. It was agreed that there was a supply. The issue, as was agreed before us, was as to the characterisation of that supply. In that context, HMRC sought to persuade the Tribunal and the court that when one considered the totality of the services provided, they amounted to a provision of education. The "artificiality" contended for was the dis-aggregation of the total activity of RGU into its component parts, separately "labelled", and the representation of those parts as discrete services which, even when aggregated, fell short of the provision of education. However, it is clear that by describing the arrangements as "artificial", HMRC provided a focus for debate that may well have contributed to the Tribunal mis-directing itself. The third paragraph of the decision appears to be entirely beside the point, and, in any event, on the terms of the 1996 Agreement probably inaccurate in fact. The view that Univation did not "supplant" RGU in the teaching of nursing studies appears to favour HMRC rather than RGU. It is not possible to support the Tribunal's approach in the light of Horizon College. Apart from that it fails to address the issue of characterisation in any real sense. In these circumstances it is appropriate to approach the issue afresh in the light of the guidance provided by Horizon College.

[36] Among the documents executed by RGU and Univation was a formal lease of the building known as the "Faculty of Health and Social Care Building, Garthdee". The permitted use of that building, so far as material, was, in terms of clause 6.16.1:

"To use the Premises as teaching accommodation for the delivery of nurse education and training..."

The lease therefore reflected an intention that Univation should be in a position to provide all forms of nursing education and training: it was not restricted to pre-registration education and training, but was comprehensive enough to include that level of education and training. It is appropriate to deal with a submission advanced in oral argument for RGU that it was implicit in Horizon College that education could only be provided once in a chain of supply. If Univation was responsible for the provision of pre-registration nursing education and training, RGU could not be.

[37] The argument proceeded initially on the basis of a proposition that if Univation had simply procured the provision of education by RGU, there would only have been one single supply, from RGU to Univation. Having departed from that submission, Mr Tyre submitted that, nevertheless, the situation was one in which there was only a single core activity of teaching. In this case, as in Horizon College, a single activity could not characterise successive supplies by two different people. The Court of Justice excluded the possibility of telescoping the issue and ignoring the legal framework in which the two transactions took place. It was implicit in the Court's approach that the provision of education could take place at one stage only. The Court drew a distinction between the provision of education and facilitating the provision of education. So approached, it became clear that it was only when the whole components of the provision of education were brought together that it was possible to characterise the supply as a provision of education. Individual components merely facilitated that ultimate provision.

[38] There are a number of difficulties with that argument. It is not supported by express authority. In particular it does not have support in the opinion of the Advocate General nor in the Court's judgment in Horizon College. It did not figure as an issue in that case. It is inconsistent with the observations of Lord Hoffman in C&E Commissioners v Robert Gordon's College, 1996 SC (HL) 6, at 11H - 12H where, referring to BLP Group v C&E Commissioners [1996] 1 WLR 174 (ECJ), he stated that the Court of Justice had emphasised that "each transaction in the chain must be examined separately to ascertain objectively what output tax is payable and what input tax is deductible." He also stated that BLP Group "makes it clear that for the purposes of European value added tax legislation, it is not permissible to take a global view of a series of transactions in the chain of supply." If each stage must be considered separately, it is difficult to understand how the characterisation of one stage as the provision of education can be determinative of the characterisation of another: see also Eastbourne Town Radio Cars Association [2001] STC 606 and C & E Commissioners v Reed Personnel Services Ltd [1995] STC 588. Finally, the contention appears fundamentally undermined by the concession that if RGU had agreed with Univation to meet the whole obligations under the 1996 Agreement, that would have been the provision of education or training. The characterisation of the supply by RGU must be determined by reference to what it supplied to Univation, not by what Univation supplied to the Scottish Executive.

[39] In relation to teaching staff, RGU remained the employer, responsible for all of the obligations of an employer, and solely empowered to discipline employees and to ensure their performance of their obligations, and that in the context of the provision of the university's own courses, which, in terms of the broader arrangements had to meet the requirements of the public authorities. In terms of paragraph 3.4 of Part 4 of the Schedule to the Services Agreement, RGU were obliged to keep Univation informed of the identities of the staff having responsibility for the day to day provision of the services. Paragraph 8.2 delegated to Univation the authority to supervise and manage the performance of the services and the authority to give lawful instructions to staff pursuant to the provision of the services. It is open to question whether those provisions could have any legally binding effect in a question with any employee of RGU who was not personally a party to the arrangements. No employee owed any duty to Univation which that company had a title or interest to enforce.

[40] Mr Tyre argued that the Services Agreement empowered Univation to require RGU to secure the performance by university staff of RGU's obligations under the Agreement. That might well be the case in practice: the services required of staff following the execution of the Services Agreement were precisely those that they were obliged to perform in the ordinary course of their employment with RGU, and the staff were not involved in the arrangements. The test, however, must be whether RGU could compel a university employee to carry out a task to implement an obligation of the university to Univation that was not within the scope of the employee's duties to RGU. It is plain that the university would have no such power. In any event, there is a lack of substance in the notion of Univation having control in relation to RGU employees. It is reflected in paragraph 8.3. of part 4 of the Schedule to the Agreement. Discipline over employees, even where Univation had cause to be dissatisfied with a university employee's conduct or performance, lay with RGU. Univation's sole right was to report to RGU, at whose exclusive discretion it lay to take action. Control over teaching, on any view a core element in the provision of education, lay with RGU.

[41] As discussed above, RGU also retained ownership, and on the express terms of the contracts, possession of and control over the equipment required for the provision of nursing training and education. If it is necessary, as argued above, to imply a term requiring RGU to provide the equipment or otherwise make it available for the purposes of supplying the services, the only physical element of the provision of education omitted from the Services Agreement was the provision of premises. The lease effectively provided separately for Univation's occupation of the building. But ownership of the property is hardly material so long as it is available for the prescribed purpose.

[42] At the end of the day, Mr Tyre did not point to any practical aspect of the activities of RGU prior to the arrangements with Univation that had changed as a result of those arrangements. As he put it, nothing of the RGU structures had been dismantled, but they no longer applied at the top. The directorate of the university no longer had rights or duties under the 1996 Agreement: a new organisation had supplanted the university. (It is not clear why this is said to be the case, given the terms of the 1996 Agreement, but no point was taken by HMRC on the clause providing for joint and several liability.) Mr Tyre argued that the element of control had passed to Univation. Because direction and control had passed, all that the University could thereafter supply was the teaching component of education. That was something less than the provision of education, and the exemption did not apply.

[43] That a degree of influence over RGU's performance of its obligations was conferred on Univation is clear. Unless one were to dismiss the whole arrangement as a sham, which was not suggested by HMRC, there was at least a sense in which RGU was answerable to Univation for the performance of its services under the arrangements. One would expect as much in an arrangement under which Univation took on some or all of the obligations provided in the 1996 Agreement, and the mechanics of reporting were put in place and have been operated as between the parties, whatever their content. But that does not entitle one to ignore the realities of the situation. On that approach we consider that the interposition of control by Univation is nominal and immaterial. RGU continued to provide the students' education irrespective of the creation of an oversight in Univation.

[44] There were submissions for RGU that sought to distinguish the positions of Univation and the Scottish Ministers as purchasers of supplies. The Scottish Ministers, it was accepted, purchased supplies that fell to be characterised as the provision of education because they were paying for the education and training of the students. Univation on the other hand had taken on the obligation to implement the contract with the Scottish Ministers. Before and after the arrangements there was the provision of education to the students. But there was a difference in the contractual framework. Characterisation at the successive points in the chain of supply should reach different results. There were differences between what the Scottish Ministers received under the 1996 Agreement as assigned and what Univation received under the Services Agreement.

[45] In approaching this issue, it has to be noted that there was already in the 1996 Agreement provision for external control of aspects of the provision of education. Annex A paragraph 1.1.1. provided for annual review of the delivery of the services. Paragraph 7 obliged RGU to produce documentary evidence of the qualifications of the staff. Annex B paragraph 2 required RGU to meet the requirements of NBS. Paragraph 3.10 required RGU to monitor practice placement for NBS. Paragraph 7.2 required RGU to comply with the quality assurance requirements of NBS. Paragraph 8 added to the review requirements. It has not been suggested that any of these elements of external supervision detracted from the characterisation of the activities of RGU under the 1996 Agreement as the provision of education. We have not been persuaded that the interposition of a further supervisory role assuring Univation of the performance by RGU of its obligations to Univation makes any difference to the characterisation of RGU's supplies in these circumstances. It was agreed that in fact it was a university employee, Jennie Parry, who managed the nursing and midwifery courses. She also dealt with the Scottish Executive on a day to day basis in relation to the operation of the contract for the provision of nursing and midwifery services. She had no formal position within Univation. She was not a director of the company. It was the university that undertook essential quality control in relation to the nursing and midwifery courses. There was no evidence that the Board of Univation had issued any instructions in connection with the implementation of the arrangements. It was agreed that there had been no circumstance in which Jennie Parry had found it necessary to refer any issue to the Board of Univation. Jennie Parry presented a quarterly report to Univation, and at six monthly intervals presented papers at Board meetings. That level of accountability is insignificant in comparison to the level of accountability to the Scottish Ministers, and that depended on due performance by RGU of its obligations.

[46] It is necessary to mention at this stage the additional finding in fact that "Jennie Parry reports to Professor Harper ... as a Director of the Company". Professor Harper was Ms Parry's line manager in RGU. He was a vice principal of the university and a director of Univation. There was no evidence and there are no findings in fact that would enable one to distinguish his activities relative to Ms Parry as between his university role and his role in Univation. Ms Parry had no relationship with Univation. With respect to the Tribunal, without some explanation being sought as to the context in which the assertion was made in evidence and the finding was made, it is a meaningless statement. However, if it was intended to indicate that Ms Parry, despite having no relationship with Univation, represented the university in some sense in accounting to Univation for her work within the scope of the Services Agreement, it is difficult to understand what difference that made. It could not elevate Univation's participation in management of the educational activity above the nominal level it otherwise had in the absence of some indication that it made a difference to what was done, or how it was done. If one attempted to apply the same approach to Professor Harper himself, it would be necessary to envisage him, as vice principal, reporting to himself as a director at the interface between university and Univation spheres of activity. Again one would be forced to question more closely the artificiality of the arrangements.

[47] In Case C-108/99 Cantor Fitzgerald International [2001] STC 1453 the Court of Justice said: "to facilitate the application of VAT, it is necessary to have regard, save in exceptional cases, to the objective character of the transaction in question" (paragraph 33), a proposition for which the ECJ relied on paragraph 24 of its judgment in BLP Group. Objectively, the reality of the contract between the parties was that RGU remained for all practical purposes in control of the staff, the provision of the courses, the monitoring of performance and staff discipline, the examination of the students and the awarding of their diplomas, the provision of the social and environmental services required for their education, and their preparation for registration. It either remained solely responsible for the provision of the equipment necessary for nursing and midwifery training or was impliedly obliged to provide that equipment to Univation under the Services Agreement. There was no material difference between the situations before and after the arrangements were entered into. The same cohorts of students received the same education and training and associated services from members and representatives of the same organisation after the arrangements. The interposition of Univation in the chain of control, even if it had involved substantial as distinct from purely nominal intervention in management, did not alter the characterisation of RGU's supplies.

[48] It is unnecessary, and in our view unhelpful, to characterise the whole arrangements as artificial for the purposes of resolving the issue between parties. It was not disputed that the objectives of RGU might have been achieved: the university could have transferred the relevant part of its undertaking to Univation, with the staff and other resources required to provide education, just as the 1996 Agreement did as between the Health Boards and RGU. It might have transferred staff to Univation, and brought itself within the scope of the decision in Horizon College. It might have had a tax reduction motive in doing so. That would have been irrelevant unless it were contended that the arrangements offended the principle of abusive practices: Halifax plc and others Case C-255/02 [2006] STC 919. The issue can be determined without resort to such considerations.

[49] In our opinion, what RGU supplied to Univation falls properly to be characterised as a provision of education, just as much as did the supply the university made to the Scottish Executive prior to the arrangements with Univation. The appeal falls to be allowed, and the determination of the Tribunal reversed.

 


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