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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Debenhams Retail Plc & Anor v Sun Alliance & London Assurance Company Ltd [2005] EWCA Civ 868 (20 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/868.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 868 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
The Hon Mr Justice Etherton
HC 03 C04456
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MANCE
and
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
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(1) Debenhams Retail plc (2) Debenhams Properties Ltd |
Respond-ents/ Claimants |
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- and - |
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Sun Alliance and London Assurance Company Ltd |
Appellant/ Defendant |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr John Furber QC (instructed by Messrs Maples Teesdale) for the Appellant/Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
Jacob LJ (giving the first judgment at the request of Lord Justice Judge):
"A declaration that for the purposes of calculating the additional rent payable under the terms of the lease the turnover to be calculated in accordance with paragraph 3(a) of the third schedule of the lease should not include Value Added Tax".
The Relevant Terms of the Lease
"1 The rents hereinbefore reserved shall be:
(i) the yearly sum of FIFTY-FIVE THOUSAND POUNDS
(£55,000) (hereinafter referred to as "the basic rent") and
(ii) such sum (if any) in each year (hereinafter referred to as
"the additional rent") as shall be equal to a proportion of turnover (as in Clause 3 hereof defined) calculated by taking the aggregate of:-
(a) Four per centum (4%) of the excess of turnover above the sum of ONE MILLION THREE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-FIVE THOUSAND POUNDS (£1,375,000) and up to the sum of ONE MILLION FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND POUNDS (£1,500,000) and
(b) Two per centum (2%) of the excess of turnover above the sum of ONE MILLION FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND POUNDS (£1,500,000) and up to the sum of THREE MILLION POUNDS (£3,000,000) and
(c) Three per centum (3%) of the excess of turnover above the sum of THREE MILLION POUNDS (£3,000,000) without limit
2. (a) The basic rent shall be payable by equal quarterly payments in advance on the usual quarter days in every year the first of such payments or a proportionate part thereof being in respect of the period from the date of this Underlease to the quarter day next following to be made on the signing hereof
(b) the additional rent (if any) shall be payable in each year within Twenty-one days after it shall have been calculated and determined in manner hereinafter appearing
3. (a) In this Schedule the expression "turnover" shall mean the gross amount of the total sales including services from trade in the Demised Premises or any part or parts thereof by the Tenant (meaning in this context the turnover of the Tenant and of any licensee of the Tenant trading in any part of the Demised Premises) during any trading period of the Tenant commencing on or about the First Day of February in each year (hereinafter called "the Trading Period" or "trading Periods") where the context so requires and in calculating turnover account shall be taken of goods and merchandise returned by customers and accepted by the Tenant and of cash and other discounts given in the normal and ordinary course of trade and in all cases in relation to periods of less than the Trading Period (if any) turnover shall be deemed to accrue from day to day and in relation to any licensee of the Tenant turnover shall be included only for any lesser period
(b) The Tenant shall procure a certificate (hereinafter referred to as "the turnover certificate") to be issued by its Auditors within the period of two months following the last day of the Trading Period in each year specifying the amount of turnover and in the event of default involving delay in issuing the turnover certificate the Tenant shall pay to the Landlord interest on such additional rent (if any) as shall become payable by virtue of the issue of such Turnover Certificate at the rate of seven per centum (7%) per annum less income tax for the period commencing the First day next following the said period of two months
(c) The Tenant shall keep and cause each of its licensees to keep full proper and accurate records of turnover and shall afford all necessary facilities to the Landlords and their duly authorised Accountants to inspect the same at all reasonable times
(d) If the Landlords shall not agree the turnover certificate they shall give notice in writing to that effect to the Tenant as soon as may be practicable and the parties shall thereupon use their best endeavours to agree the amount of turnover provided that in default of agreement the dispute shall be referred at the instance of either party to an Arbitrator appointed by the President for the time being of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales and if by agreement between the parties or on the decision of such Arbitrator it shall be decided that the turnover certificate shall have been incorrect then the Tenant shall forthwith pay to the Landlords the amount (if any) so agreed or found by such decision to be due together with interest thereon at the rate and for the period mentioned in sub-clause (b) hereof unless on arbitration the said Arbitrator shall desire that no such interest should be paid."
The date point
The Factual Matrix
VAT
The Judge's Construction
i) The expression gross amount of total sales can mean different things according to context. It is not, as Mr Furber QC had submitted, plain and unambiguous;
ii) The position was that the expression had to be construed in context, just as the expression gross receipts obtained in the theatre had to be so construed in the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal case, Lynn v Nathanson [1931] 2 DLR 457. In that case a government theatre tax had to be paid by patrons who bought two tickets, one for the theatre and one for the tax. The tax was held to be outside the phrase in the lease.
iii) The words must be construed in a commercial context.
iv) The "purpose or at least an important purpose" of the turnover rent was sharing of the risk of trading success.
v) To include the VAT is not consistent with that purpose because it does not "swell the tenant's assets over the full duration of the annual trading or accounting period in respect of the rental accounting period" (Debenhams will have had to pay Customs meanwhile).
vi) Changes in VAT rates would directly affect the rent if VAT counts as part of turnover that is inimical to the "important purpose".
vii) There is no difficulty in calculating sales net of VAT. This is what would have been done for the purposes of drawing up the company accounts (as now required by company law). And even if the process of auditing for rental purposes and for company accounts were not simultaneous, the same process (ex VAT) would be involved for both. VAT is excluded from a "true and fair view" of a company's profit and loss and that is what the parties had in mind.
viii) Thus, just as in the lease, trade discounts and returns are allowed for in company accounts, but VAT is not.
ix) It is irrelevant that purchase tax operated at the time when the lease is to be construed. Purchase tax was not a tax on Debenhams or its customers. Although it formed part of Debenhams' costs, whether it was passed on to its customers was purely a matter for its commercial judgment. VAT by contrast, is a non-discretionary element of the price to be charged to the customer.
My opinion
"No one has ever made an acontextual statement. There is always some context to any utterance, however meagre."
Lord Justice Mance:
"the sales figures in the days of Purchase Tax and the sales figures which we quote now [i.e. under the VAT regime] are quite reasonably comparable".
It continued, referring to the possibility of an increase of rates:
"and in fact the introduction of multi-rate V.A.T. with a 25% rate will certainly not be to the disadvantage of [the landlords] and would be comparable to the old days when Purchase Tax was raised from say 11Ό[%] to 25%"
Lord Justice Judge:
33. I agree with both judgments.