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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions >> Northampton Theatres Trust Ltd v Revenue and Customs [2006] UKVAT V19485 (03 March 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2006/V19485.html Cite as: [2006] UKVAT V19485 |
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19485
EXEMPTION – Article 13A(1)(n) of the Sixth Directive and the Value Added Tax (Cultural Services) Order 1996 – whether unjust enrichment – no – whether 3-year cap applies – no
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE
NORTHAMPTON THEATRES TRUST LIMITED Appellant
- and -
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S
REVENUE AND CUSTOMS Respondents
Tribunal: DR JOHN F AVERY JONES CBE (Chairman)
JOHN BROWN CBE FCA CTA
Sitting in public in London on 24 and 25 October 2005
Roger Thomas, counsel, instructed by Grant Thornton, chartered accountants, for the Appellant
Richard Smith, counsel, instructed by the Acting Solicitor for HM Revenue and Customs, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2006
DECISION
(1) The Appellant is a charity whose main objects are to provide a cultural experience which will enlighten, entertain, educate and stimulate appreciation of the arts for the public at large, and in particular the residents of Northampton and the East Midlands by providing a wide range of quality arts and entertainment at the Centre at Guildhall Road, Northampton or elsewhere. It owns the Royal and Derngate theatres.
(2) Before October 1999 the Derngate theatre was operated by Derngate Trust Limited, a charity, for cultural shows (the type of show expected by those making grants to the Appellant), and Derngate Enterprises, a trading subsidiary which covenanted its profits to its parent, for more popular shows. Both were within a group registration with Derngate Trust Limited as representative member. On 3 October 1999 the business was transferred to the Appellant which put on both types of shows, Derngate Trust Limited was wound up, and Derngate Enterprises remains as a dormant subsidiary (the Royal theatre was transferred from another body, Northampton Repertory Players Limited). The VAT registration continued with the Appellant as the representative member. References to the Appellant include the predecessor entities within the same VAT group.
(3) There are three types of arrangement made by the Appellant for putting on shows. About two-thirds of programmes are bought-in productions in which the Appellant runs the box office as agent for the producer and the proceeds are split. Other programmes are put on by the Appellant itself. The Appellant also leases out the theatre to others.
(4) Derngate Trust Limited (before 3 October 1999), and thereafter the Appellant, ran at a deficit in all relevant years, which was partly made up by grants from the Arts Council and Northampton Borough Council. The following figures are extracted from its accounts in respect of the years for which claims are live (see paragraph 2(11) below); we were not given the figures for the blank cells.
Year to 31 March | Income | Expenditure | Deficit | Grants | Net deficit | Potential refund | Potential deficit |
1994 | 2,578,941 | 3,547,666 | 968,725 | 910,000 | 58,725 | 51,251 | 8,474 |
1995 | 2,387,017 | 3,225,923 | 838,906 | 815,000 | 23,906 | (14,075) | 37,981 |
1996 | 2,651,802 | 3,525,564 | 873,762 | 790,000 | 83,762 | 9,808 | 73,954 |
2001 | 5,037,500 | 6,405,533 | 1368,033 | 1283,141 | 84,892 | ||
2002 | 4,772,614 | 6,260,304 | 1487,690 | 1233,033 | 254,657 | ||
2003 | 4,893,228 | 6,234,030 | 1340,802 | 1283,445 | 57,357 |
(5) Up to October 1999 further funds were provided by profits covenanted by Derngate Enterprises Limited. For example in the year to 31 March 1996 there was a loss of £17,943 after taking into account recharges of expenditure to the subsidiary of £65,819 not included in the table above, and a covenanted payment of £74,037, resulting in a consolidated profit of £56,094.
(6) The ticket price is set in conjunction with the promoter for bought-in productions, with a view to maximising the revenue in both their interests, taking into account factors such as the type of production, its knowledge of the artiste and promoter, its expected popularity, the day of the week and its knowledge of its customers derived from its database. Experience has shown that there is a maximum price that the public will pay for various productions and if this is exceeded revenue will drop, as in consequence will associated income such as bar takings. The Appellant was aware of prices charged by other theatres but the others in the vicinity were smaller and not in competition for the same promoters' shows. The theatre in Milton Keynes, which was believed to be liable to VAT, was potentially in competition but had different programmes, mainly weekly repertory. Their research showed that following the opening of the Milton Keynes theatre in about 2001 more people were going to the theatre. Ticket prices are not set with VAT in mind. An estimate is made of the number of tickets sold, taking concessions into account, VAT is deducted; the promoter's share (plus VAT) and any royalties are deducted with any other specifically attributable costs. Overhead costs will then be deducted.
(7) The Appellant's agreement with the Arts Council requires that, after taking grants into account, a break-even budget is provided.
(8) Mr James of Grant Thornton wrote to Mr Smith mentioning the Cultural Services Order; a meeting took place on 28 November 1996; an internal Grant Thornton note of 3 December 1996 stated that the Appellant "may be entitled to exemption for the cultural activities which it supplies. However, whether it is advantageous…to investigate this point further will depend upon the amount of input tax which would be lost as a result. Only once Neil [Smith] has completed his analysis of the last VAT Return will we be in a position to consider this further." Mr James was aware of the possibility of challenges to Customs interpretation of the Cultural Services Order but nobody was making protective claims at the time.
(9) Although there is nothing in the minutes Mr Smith discussed with the Finance Committee of the Appellant the possibility of claiming exemption under the Cultural Services Order. There was no further discussion as the Appellant did not qualify on Customs' interpretation of the Order in Notice 701/47 (June 1996) because it had paid administrators.
(10) An issue of Legal Update by the Theatrical Management Association of May 1997, which it is likely that Mr Smith saw although he did not remember, mentions that one member of the Association had successfully claimed exemption despite paying a fee to its treasurer and administrator. Mr Smith was aware of other discussion of the issue of the scope of bodies entitled to exemption under the Cultural Services Order in the accountancy press and the trade magazine "The Stage."
(11) About the time of the meeting with Mr James the Appellant was planning a major refurbishment and recovery of input tax on the project was important. It had applied for a grant from the National Lottery. There were lengthy negotiations during which the likely amount of grant varied from £13.7m to £1m. Mrs Grant quantified the input tax on the refurbishment as £1.3 in 2001 and it has since risen to £2m. Customs accept that this is covered by transitional relief for building projects in progress on 1 June 2004 in Business Brief 28/03 (but are holding up repayment of input tax on building work pending the result of this appeal).
(12) On 17 July 2002 the first claim was made for refund in respect of Derngate Trust Limited for the period 1 April 1993 to 3 October 1999 (Derngate Enterprises Limited is not included in the claim) on Grant Thornton's advice following the decision in Zoological Society of London, Case C-267/00 that Customs' interpretation of the Cultural Services Order was wrong in respect of the meaning of managed on a voluntary basis (the Directive says "an essentially voluntary basis") with the consequence that the Appellant could qualify for exemption. The Appellant now concedes that periods after 4 December 1996 (the date of the resolution in Parliament giving effect to the three-year cap) are time barred. Refurbishment work had not started when the claim was made. On 4 March 2004 the Appellant made its second refund claim in respect of the period August 1999 to March 2003. It now concedes that periods earlier than 3 years before 4 March 2004 are time barred. The live claims are therefore from 1 April 1993 to 4 December 1996, which Customs contends is barred by both the three-year cap and unjust enrichment; and 5 March 2001 to 4 March 2004, which Customs contends is barred by unjust enrichment.
(13) The Appellant wrote to a random selection of 21,000 its customers on 7 September 2005 saying that if they succeeded in the claim which is the subject of this appeal, customers would not receive any refund but asking if the customer preferred either that Customs keep it or the Appellant used it for their benefit. They received responses from 5,996 (28%) all of whom said that they had bought tickets over the last 10 years, that they recognised that they were entitled to a proportion of the refund, and that they donated it to the theatre.
(1) Where a person—
(a) has accounted to the Commissioners for VAT for a prescribed accounting period (whenever ended), and
(b) in doing so, has brought into account as output tax an amount that was not output tax due,
the Commissioners shall be liable to credit the person with that amount.
…
(3) It shall be a defence, in relation to a claim under this section by virtue of subsection (1) or (1A) above, that the crediting of an amount would unjustly enrich the claimant.
Unjust enrichment
(1) The burden of proof is on Customs.
(2) The Appellant runs at a deficit with expenditure exceeding income by 30-35%. By charging say £10 to receive £7 from the customer it cannot be said to be passing on the additional element of VAT on the ticket. Customs need to show that the VAT has been passed on rather than some other cost.
(3) Even if (which he denied) VAT had been passed on, it would be not be unjust for the Appellant to retain the refund as shown by the replies to its questionnaire.
(4) He reserved his right to argue that s 80 of the VAT Act 1994 was discriminatory and could not be relied on by Customs, this point being currently before the ECJ.
(1) The Appellant took VAT into account when setting ticket prices because it had to show that it would not run at a loss in order to obtain Arts Council funding. When shows were staged by outside promoters there was a contractual provision for the VAT to be deducted from the takings before division, which indicates that VAT was considered when deciding the pricing policy. Tickets were not priced at what the public will pay as there were instances of prices being raised to recoup losses. Some of the comparator theatres were not exempt and their prices included VAT. The Appellant charged similar prices to them.
(2) The Appellant's questionnaire to customers admitted that VAT was passed on to the customers who were sent a form including the following: "I recognise that I am entitled to a proportion of any VAT refunded by Customs and Excise to the theatre because the tickets I bought should have been exempt from VAT." In any event the sums stated in the letter were incorrect and too small.
"23. It is accordingly for the national courts to determine, in the light of the facts in each case, whether the burden of the charge has been transferred in whole or in part by the trader to other persons and, if so, whether reimbursement to the trader would amount to unjust enrichment.
24. In this respect it should be made clear, first, that if the final consumer is able to obtain reimbursement through the trader of the amount of the charge passed on to him, that trader must in turn be able to obtain reimbursement from the national authorities. On the other hand, if the final consumer can obtain repayment directly from the national authorities of the amount of the charge which he has paid but which was not due, the question of reimbursing the trader does not, as such, arise.
25. Second, it must be noted that in Bianco and Girard, (at 1119, para 17), the court stated that even though in national law indirect taxes are designed to be passed on to the final consumer and even if in commerce they are normally passed on in whole or in part, it cannot be generally assumed that the charge is actually passed on in every case. The actual passing on of such taxes, either in whole or in part, depends on various factors in each commercial transaction which distinguish it from other transactions in other contexts. Consequently, the question whether an indirect tax has or has not been passed on in each case is a question of fact to be determined by the national court which may freely assess the evidence. However, in the case of indirect taxes, it may not be assumed that there is a presumption that they have been passed on and that it is for the taxpayer to prove the contrary.
26. The same applies where taxpayers have been obliged by the relevant legislation to incorporate the charge in the cost price of the product concerned. The fact that such a legal obligation exists does not mean that there is a presumption that the entire charge has been passed on, even where failure to comply with that obligation carries a penalty.
27. Accordingly, a member state may resist repayment to the trader of a charge levied in breach of Community law only where it is established that the charge has been borne in its entirety by someone other than the trader and that reimbursement of the latter would constitute unjust enrichment.
28. It follows that if the burden of the charge has been passed on only in part, it is for the national authorities to repay the trader the amount not passed on.
29. It should be borne in mind, however, that even where it is established that the burden of the charge has been passed on in whole or in part to the purchaser, repayment to the trader of the amount thus passed on does not necessarily entail his unjust enrichment."
In Kapniki Mikhailidis AE Cases C-441/98 and 442/98 the court said:
"27. By its second question, the national court asks, in substance, (i) whether Community law allows a Member State to refuse to refund charges levied in breach of Community law when it has been established that the refund would involve unjust enrichment and (ii) how proof of unjust enrichment may be established.
- Mikhailidis submits that it should not have to bear the burden of proof. The Commission, which supports Mikhailidis on this point, observes that, according to the case-law of the Court, there is no presumption that taxes have been passed on to third parties and that it is not for the taxable person to prove the contrary.
- By contrast, the IKA and the Greek Government contend (i) that a Member State is entitled to refuse to refund a charge levied in breach of Community law if it is established that that would give rise to unjust enrichment and (ii) that inasmuch as Mikhailidis has failed to show that the levying of the disputed charge caused an increase in the price of the products and a reduction in the volume of sales, it must be inferred that refunding the charge entails unjust enrichment. Therefore, the IKA and the Greek Government maintain that the competent authorities are not obliged to refund the disputed charge to the plaintiff in the main proceedings.
- As a preliminary point, it is apparent from well-established case-law that the right to a refund of charges levied in a Member State in breach of rules of Community law is the consequence of, and complement to, the rights conferred on individuals by the Community provisions prohibiting charges having an effect equivalent to customs duties. The Member State is therefore obliged in principle to repay charges levied in breach of Community law (Case 199/82 Amministrazione delle Finanze dello Stato v San Giorgio [1983] ECR 3595, paragraph 12; and, most recently, Case C-343/96 Dilexport v Amministrazione delle Finanze dello Stato [1999] ECR I-579, paragraph 23).
- As regards the first part of the second question, it is settled case-law that the protection of rights guaranteed in the matter by Community law does not require an order for the recovery of charges improperly levied to be granted in conditions which would involve the unjust enrichment of those entitled (see, in particular, Case 68/79 Just v Danish Ministry for Fiscal Affairs [1980] ECR 501, paragraph 26).
- It is therefore for the national courts to determine, in the light of the facts of each case, whether the burden of the charge has been transferred in whole or in part by the trader to other persons and, if so, whether reimbursement to the trader would amount to unjust enrichment (see, inter alia, Joined Cases C-192/95 to C-218/95 Comateb and Others v Directeur Général des Douanes et Droits Indirects [1997] ECR I-165, paragraph 23).
- However, a Member State may resist repayment to the trader of a charge levied in breach of Community law only where it is established that the charge has been borne in its entirety by someone other than the trader and that reimbursement of the latter would constitute unjust enrichment. It follows that if the burden of the charge has been passed on only in part, it is for the national authorities to repay the trader the amount not passed on (Comateb, paragraphs 27 and 28).
- Furthermore, even where it is established that the burden of the charge has been passed on in whole or in part to third parties, repayment to the trader of the amount thus passed on does not necessarily entail his unjust enrichment (Comateb, paragraph 29).
- The Court has already observed on several occasions that it would be compatible with the principles of Community law for courts before which claims for repayment were brought to take into consideration the damage which the trader concerned might have suffered because measures such as the disputed charge had the effect of restricting the volume of exports (Just, paragraph 26; and Comateb, paragraph 30).
- As regards the second part of the second question, it should be borne in mind that any rules of evidence which have the effect of making it virtually impossible or excessively difficult to secure repayment of charges levied in breach of Community law are incompatible with Community law. That is so particularly in the case of presumptions or rules of evidence intended to place upon the taxpayer the burden of establishing that the charges unduly paid have not been passed on to other persons or of special limitations concerning the form of the evidence to be adduced, such as the exclusion of any kind of evidence other than documentary evidence (San Giorgio, cited above, paragraph 14).
- In that regard, Community law precludes a Member State from making repayment of customs duties and taxes contrary to Community law subject to a condition, such as the requirement that such duties or taxes have not been passed on to third parties, which the plaintiff must show he has satisfied (Dilexport, paragraph 54)."
"For example, the trader may choose to curtail any increase in his retail prices and maintain his volume of sales by limiting his profit margin to absorb all or part of the tax. Or else, having decided not to take that course but to increase his prices by the exact amount of the tax, he may find that his profits drop because he is making fewer sales. And he may even choose to absorb part of the tax himself yet still find a drop in sales. In all such cases which are plausible in a situation of keen competition between traders he will have suffered an economic loss as a result of the imposition of an unlawful tax, so that it cannot be said either that he has passed on (all) the burden of that tax to third parties or that he would be unjustly enriched if (an appropriate proportion of) the tax were reimbursed to him."
Three-Year cap
(1) 1 January 1990: transitional taxation of cultural services within article 13A(1)(n) of the Sixth Directive removed by the Eighteenth Directive.
(2) 8 May 1996: the Cultural Services Order made; laid before the House of Commons on 9 May 1996, and came into force on 1 June 1996.
(3) June 1996: VAT Notice 701/47 explaining that the Cultural Services Order did not apply if any payment is made for services of a managerial or administrative nature; also providing that a public body did not have to be exempt if it did not wish to be, but that this would be subject to review. The notice provides for repayments from 1 January 1990 subject to the defence of unjust enrichment.
(4) 18 July 1996: 3-year cap announced in Parliament applying to claims made from 18 July 1996.
(5) 13 November 1996: Tribunal decision in Glastonbury Abbey v Customs and Excise Commissioners [1996] V & DR 307 released, deciding that in the circumstances having paid employees did not prevent article 13A(1)(1)(n) from applying (but that the provision was not directly applicable).
(6) 14 November 1996: Mr James' letter to Mr Smith mentioning the Cultural Services Order; meeting on 28 November 1996; internal Grant Thornton note of 3 December 1996 that the Appellant "may be entitled to exemption for the cultural activities which it supplies. At the time the Appellant was planning the major refurbishment and recovery of input tax on the project was important.
(7) 4 December 1996: Provisional Collection of Taxes Act 1968 Resolution giving effect to the 3-year cap. Business Brief BB/22/02 issued on 5 August 2002 deals with the transitional arrangements for making reclaims of overpaid VAT before that date.
(8) 19 March 1997: 3-year cap enacted in s 47 Finance Act 1997.
(9) 31 March 1997: original end date (later extended to 30 June 1997, see paragraph 14(15) below by which time the taxpayer must have discovered the error in order to obtain the benefit of transitional arrangements introduced following Marks and Spencer, Case C-62/00 [2002] STC 1036.
(10) May 1997: Legal Update by the Theatrical Management Association mentions that one member had successfully claimed exemption despite paying a fee to its treasurer and administrator.
(11) 30 June 1997: extended end date (see paragraph 14(15) below) by which time the taxpayer must have discovered the error in order to obtain the benefit of the transitional arrangements following Marks and Spencer.
(12) 21 March 2002: Zoological Society of London, Case C-267/00) decided by the European Court of Justice with the result that the Appellant could qualify for exemption.
(13) 11 July 2002: Marks and Spencer case decided by the European Court of Justice that the absence of transitional provisions on enactment of the 3-year cap was in breach of Community law.
(14) 17 July 2002: The Appellant makes the first claim for refund in respect of Derngate Trust for the period 1 April 1993 to 3 October 1999. Refurbishment work had not then started. The live period is 1 April 1993 to 4 December 1996, of which the period from 1 June 1996 is after the Cultural Service Order came into force.
(15) 5 August 2002: Business Brief 22/02 issued setting out transitional arrangements following Marks and Spencer. This invited repayment claims by 31 March 2003 including cases where taxpayers "…made no claim [before 31 March 1997] but can demonstrate that they discovered the error before 31 March 1997."
(16) 8 October 2002: Business Brief 27/02 changing the references to 31 March in both years in paragraph 14(15) above to 30 June giving effect to the Grundig Italiana Case C-255/00 [2003] All ER (EC) 176 in which the European Court of Justice held that the minimum transitional period must be 6 months.
(17) 10 December 2003: Business Brief 28/03 explaining changes following Zoological Society of London applying from 1 June 2004, including a concession for major building projects in progress at 1 June 2004 allowing recovery of input tax on such projects between 1 June 2004 and 31 May 2007, which Customs agree applies to the Appellant.
(18) 29 December 2003: the Appellant starts exempting its supplies.
(19) 4 March 2004: the Appellant makes its second refund claim in respect of the period August 1999 to March 2003, of which the period from 5 March 2001 to 4 March 2004 is not affected by the three-year cap.
(1) The Appellant had a Community right to repayment under article 13A(1)(n) of the Sixth Directive until 31 May 1996 because of the UK's failure to introduce the exemption until it was included in the Cultural Services Order, and thereafter because of Customs' failure correctly to interpret that provision, as transposed by the Cultural Services Order, in relation to the Zoological Society of London point.
(2) The Appellant was aware of the opportunity to make a claim and so could have made a claim during a transitional period of there had been one. It would have made a claim if Grant Thornton had so advised.
(3) Because of the principle of effectiveness (that a State must not make it excessively difficult for the person to exercise his Community rights) the burden of proof is on Customs to show knowledge on the part of the Appellant and that the Appellant would not have made a claim, which Customs have not done
(4) Customs misled the Appellant into not claiming exemption by its interpretation of the Cultural Service Order and so the Appellant should have a reasonable time after it was aware it had been misled as a result of the decision in Zoological Society of London to make a claim.
(1) The Appellant had no Community right to repayment since article 13A(1)(n) was not sufficiently precise to be directly applicable, but merely a domestic law right under s 80.
(2) (Further submissions were made in the light of the decision of the High Court in Fleming (Trading as Bodycraft) v HMRC [2005] STC 707 and Condé Nast Publications Limited v Customs and Excise [2005] STC 1327 which do not arise in the light of the Court of Appeal decision in the former.)
"13A(1) Without prejudice to other Community provisions, Member States shall exempt the following under conditions which they shall lay down for the purpose of ensuring the correct and straightforward application of such exemptions and of preventing any possible evasion, avoidance or abuse:…
(n) certain cultural services and goods closely linked thereto supplied by bodies governed by public law or by other cultural bodies recognised by the Member State concerned….
2 (a) Member States may make the granting to bodies other than those governed by public law of each exemption provided for in 1(b), (g), (h), (i), (l), (m) and (n) of this Article subject in each individual case to one or more of the following conditions:
—they shall not systematically aim to make a profit, but any profits nevertheless arising shall not be distributed, but shall be assigned to the continuance or improvement of the services supplied,
—they shall be managed and administered on an essentially voluntary basis by persons who have no direct or indirect interest, either themselves or through intermediaries, in the results of the activities concerned,
—they shall charge prices approved by the public authorities or which do not exceed such approved prices or, in respect of those services not subject to approval, prices lower than those charged for similar services by commercial enterprises subject to value added tax,
—exemption of the services concerned shall not be likely to create distortions of competition such as to place at a disadvantage commercial enterprises liable to value added tax."
"52. First, although Article 13(A)(1) of the Sixth Directive provides that the Member States are to apply the exemptions prescribed by that provision under conditions which they shall lay down for the purpose of ensuring the correct and straightforward application of such exemptions and of preventing any possible evasion, avoidance or abuse, a Member State may not rely, as against a taxpayer who is able to show that his tax position actually falls within one of the categories of exemption laid down in the Sixth Directive, upon its failure to adopt the very provisions which are intended to facilitate the application of that exemption (see, in relation to Article 13(B) of the Sixth Directive, Becker [Case 8/81], paragraph 33).
- Second, Article 13(A)(1)(g) of the Sixth Directive indicates in a sufficiently precise and unconditional manner the activities to which the exemption applies.
- Finally, with the regard to the concept of organisations recognised as charitable by the Member State concerned, it is correct, as the German Government has stated, that Article 13(A)(1)(g) of the Sixth Directive grants the Member States a discretion for the purpose of according certain organisations such recognition.
- As long as the Member States observe the limits of the discretion which is accorded to them by Article 13(A)(1)(g) of the Sixth Directive, persons cannot rely on that provision in order to acquire the status of charitable organisation as against the Member State concerned.
- Where a person seeks the status of charitable organisation, it is for the national courts to examine whether the competent authorities have observed those limits while applying Community principles, in particular the principle of equal treatment.
- It will accordingly be for the national authorities, in accordance with Community law and subject to review by the national courts, to determine, in the light in particular of practice followed by the competent administrative body in analogous situations, which organisations should be recognised as charitable within the meaning of Article 13(A)(1)(g) of the Sixth Directive.
- In the main proceedings, the national court will thus be able to take into account the existence of specific provisions, be they national or regional, legislative or administrative, or tax or social security provisions, the fact that associations carrying on the same activities as the claimant in the main proceedings are already entitled to a similar exemption, given the public interest inherent in those activities, and the fact that the costs of the services supplied by the claimant in the main proceedings may be largely met by statutory health funds or by social security bodies with which private operators such as the claimant in the main proceedings have contractual relations.
- This conclusion cannot be affected by the possibility under Article 13(A)(2) of the Sixth Directive of making the grant of the exemptions provided for in Article 13(A)(1) subject to one or more conditions.
It is inherent in that decision that charitable is a Community concept, as has since been made clear by Kingscrest Associates Limited v Customs and Excise Commissioners, Case C-498/03 [2005] STC 1547 at [27]: "the word 'charitable' in the English version of art 13A(1)(g) and (h) of the Sixth Directive has its own independent meaning in Community law which must be interpreted taking account of all the language versions of that directive."
"14. The Spanish government then argues, concerning the exemption of supplies of services referred to in art 13A(1)(m), that, unlike other exemptions envisaged by that provision, letter (m) provides for the exemption of 'certain' supplies of services. In its submission, that permits member states to limit the scope of art 13A(1)(m), not only by expressly excluding certain services provided by sports establishments from the exemption, but also by applying 'other criteria', such as the amount of the consideration for the services in question.
15. On that point, it is clear from art 13A(1)(m) of the Sixth Directive that the exemption in question concerns supplies of services closely linked to sport or physical education provided by non-profit-making bodies.
16. It is undisputed that, under the Spanish legislation, the exemption envisaged under art 13A(1)(m) of the Sixth Directive is granted only to private sports bodies or establishments of a social nature which charge membership fees not exceeding certain amounts.
17. To apply the criterion of the amount of membership fees may lead to results contrary to art 13A(1)(m). As the Advocate General has pointed out at para 5 of his opinion, to apply such a criterion may result, first, in a non-profit-making body being excluded from the benefit of the exemption provided for by the provision and, secondly, in a profit-making body being able to benefit from it.
18. Moreover, there is nothing in that provision to the effect that a member state, when granting an exemption for a certain supply of services closely linked to sport or physical education provided by non-profit-making bodies, may make that exemption subject to any conditions other than those laid down in art 13A(2)."
(1) The Appellant would not be unjustly enriched if it keeps the refund.
(2) The Appellant is entitled to a refund for the period 1 April 1993 to 4 December 1996 and the period 5 March 2001 to 4 March 2004 as a Community right that is not affected by the 3-year cap.
Accordingly we allow the appeal.
JOHN F AVERY JONES
CHAIRMAN
RELEASE DATE: 3 March 2006
LON/05/0104