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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Buzzoni & Ors v HM Revenue & Customs [2013] EWCA Civ 1684 (19 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1684.html Cite as: [2014] BTC 1, [2013] EWCA Civ 1684, [2014] WLR(D) 13, [2014] WTLR 421, [2014] 1 WLR 3040, [2014] WLR 3040 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(Tax and Chancery Chamber)
The Hon. Mrs Justice Proudman
FTC/57/58/59/60/2011
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE BLACK
and
LADY JUSTICE GLOSTER
____________________
Buzzoni (Executor of the Estate of Lia Kamhi (Deceased)) & Others |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs |
Respondent |
____________________
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Mr Matthew Slater (instructed by Solicitor for Revenue and Customs) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moses:
a. Clause 4.1.1 'to pay an amount equal to the… 'Service Charge payable under the Headlease by the Landlord [Mrs Kamhi] as lessee';
b. Clause 4.4.1 'to keep the Premises in good and substantial repair and condition';
c. Clause 4.4.2 'to clean the Premises regularly and keep them in a clean and tidy condition at all times';
d. Clause 4.4.3 'to clean all windows regularly and at least once a month';
e. Clause 4.4.4 'to sweep and clean all chimneys and flues as needed or occasion shall require';
f. Clause 4.4.5 'to keep any balconies and terraces or unbuilt areas within the Premises adequately surfaced in good condition and free from weeds'; and
g. Clause 4.4.6 'to keep the Premises properly decorated and to redecorate every fifth year and in the six months of the Term in accordance with the Landlord's reasonable specifications and to a standard commensurate with an apartment within a high class block of flats'.
"(1) Subject to subsections (5) and (6) below, this section applies where, on or after 18th March 1986, an individual disposes of any property by way of gift and either –
(a) possession and enjoyment of the property is not bona fide assumed by the donee at or before the beginning of the relevant period; or
(b) at any time in the relevant period the property is not enjoyed to the entire exclusion, or virtually to the entire exclusion, of the donor and of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise;
and in this section "the relevant period" means a period ending on the date of the donor's death and beginning seven years before that date or, if it is later, on the date of the gift.
(2) If and so long as –
(a) possession and enjoyment of any property is not bona fide assumed as mentioned in subsection (1)(a) above, or
(b) any property is not enjoyed as mentioned in subsection (1)(b) above,
the property is referred to (in relation to the gift and the donor) as property subject to a reservation.
(3) If, immediately before the death of the donor, there is any property which, in relation to him, is property subject to a reservation then, to the extent that the property would not, apart from this section, form part of the donor's estate immediately before his death, that property shall be treated for the purposes of the 1984 Act as property to which he was beneficially entitled immediately before his death.
(4) If, at a time before the end of the relevant period, any property ceases to be property subject to a reservation, the donor shall be treated for the purposes of the 1984 Act as having at that time made a disposition of the property by a disposition which is a potentially exempt transfer."
The Source of the Impugned Benefit
"…the beneficial ownership of land may be divided in terms of time as well as space, so that the right of enjoyment of the land for a limited period, such as for life or a term of years, and the right to enjoy the land after the expiry of that period, can exist simultaneously as property interests in possession and in remainder or reversion. One such interest may form the subject matter of a gift while the other is retained." (300C-D)
"partake, so to speak, of the nature of the estates in connection with which they are made, so that like those estates they may benefit and bind third parties. Therefore they belong to the category of interests in land as well as to the law of contract, and the two sets of rules have to be considered together" (Megarry and Wade's Law of Real Property 8th edn. para.20-02).
"From these cases I conclude that to come within the scope of the second limb of s.102(1)(b) the benefit must consist of some advantage which the donor did not enjoy before he made the gift, and that it is not sufficient if it consists merely of the property which he owned before the gift and which was not included in it.
No such benefit has been identified in the present case. The lease itself was merely property not comprised in the gift. It contained no covenants which would have the effect of transferring to the trustees a liability which would otherwise be borne by Lady Ingram".(1268h-j)
"If one looks at the real nature of the transaction, there seems to me no doubt that Ferris J. was right in saying that the trustees and beneficiaries never at any time acquired the land free of Lady Ingram's leasehold interest. The need for a conveyance followed by a leaseback is a mere matter of conveyancing form…a lease is a contract as well as an estate. It involves obligations between the parties enforceable in contract or by virtue of privity of estate. It cannot therefore be regarded as the mere reservation of property like a life interest. This is true and if, in addition to the leasehold estate which she reserved, Lady Ingram had obtained by covenant any additional benefits, as In re Nichols, decd. [1975] 1 WLR 534, they would have been benefits reserved. But in a case such as this, when she in fact received no such benefits, the contractual nature of the lease seems to me a matter of conveyancing theory rather than substance" (303H-304C).
"The right to have the mansion house and outbuildings repaired under that covenant did not exist before, and therefore could not be something simply not given… It was reserved out of that which was given, since it was a covenant immediately operative and running with the land." (543G-H)
Impact on the Exclusivity of the Donees' Enjoyment
"where a party is liable at law by immediate privity of contract which contract also confers a benefit, and the obligation of the contract is common to him and to the defendant, but the whole benefit of the contract is taken by the defendant; the former is entitled to be indemnified by the latter in respect of the performance of the obligation". (104) (see also Goff and Jones Law of Unjust Enrichment 8th Edn. 20-01)
"if bona fide possession and enjoyment of the property in which the interest subsisted was assumed immediately thereafter by the person becoming entitled by virtue of or upon the disposition or determination and thenceforward retained to the entire exclusion of the person who had the interest and of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise".
"...to adopt (that proposition) requires no more than to ascertain whether the deceased was left in possession of any contractual benefit at all at the end of the transaction and gives no significance to the question whether that benefit, whatever it is, is such as to trench upon the possession and enjoyment of the property in which the interest has been surrendered. My own view is that the whole proposition is fallacious." (p.47)
"It was decided long ago in Attorney-General v Worrall, that a contractual benefit may interfere with the exclusive possession and enjoyment required by such a provision…even though it does not amount to a reservation out of the property that is the subject of the gift…In effect the son was returning to the father the income on the property during the remainder of the father's life. It seems to me reasonable enough for a court to hold in those circumstances that the son had not entertained the enjoyment of what was given free from a contractual benefit to the father which encumbered the enjoyment of the very thing that was given" (p.47).
"All these decisions proceed upon a common principle, namely, that it is the possession and enjoyment of the actual property given that has to be taken account of, and if that property is, as it may be, a limited equitable interest or an equitable interest distinct from another such interest which is not given or an interest in property subject to an interest which is retained, it is of no consequence for this purpose that the retained interest remains in the beneficial enjoyment of the person who provides the gift". (p.49)
"…the entire exclusion from possession and enjoyment of the beneficial interest in property which is contemplated is entire exclusion from possession and enjoyment of the beneficial interest in property which has been given by the gift, and…possession and enjoyment by the donor of some beneficial interest therein which he has not included in the gift is not inconsistent with the entire exclusion from possession and enjoyment which the subsection requires." (p.50)
The authorities to which Lord Radcliffe referred all serve to illustrate that proposition (p.52). In Munro v Commissioner for Stamp Duty of New South Wales [1934] AC 61 a father retained rights in a partnership with his children to work land which he donated to his children. The gift did not fall foul of a similar New South Wales Stamp Duty provision because the benefit was not derived from the land which had been gifted, but from the partnership into which he and his children had entered four years before. In In Re Cochrane [1906] 2 Ir R 200 a father gave an annuity to his daughter and to her and her children a fund absolutely on the occurrence of certain events. But the trust of surplus income and the ultimate contingent trust of the body of the trust fund were expressly retained by the donor.
"If the benefits which the donor continues to enjoy are by virtue of property which was never comprised in the gift, he has not reserved any benefit out of the property of which he has disposed: see Lord Simonds in St Aubyn 22-23."
As I shall indicate later, Viscount Simonds's views are of particular importance on this issue.
"not at the expense of the children and did not impair or diminish the value of the gift to them or their enjoyment of it. It is possible for a donee, in the full and unrestrained enjoyment of his gift to use or spend it in a way that happens to produce some advantage to the donor without there being any loss or disadvantage to the donee. But, in their Lordships' judgment, any such advantage is not a benefit within the meaning of the section. The point is not strictly covered by authority, but the contrary view would be difficult to reconcile with what was said in the House of Lords in St Aubyn's case." (74)
"…this alleged benefit neither encumbered the enjoyment of the gift nor arose by way of reservation out of that which was given…"(75)
In answer to the further contention that the link between the donees' and donor's beneficial interests increased the value of each share and was, therefore, an advantage, the Board said that if it was an advantage at all, it "did not in any way impair the enjoyment of the gift by the donees or trench upon their rights" (p.75).
"Where the question is whether the donor has been entirely excluded from the subject-matter of the gift, that is the single fact to be determined. If he has not been so excluded the eye need look no further to see whether his non-exclusion has been advantageous or otherwise to the donee." (449)
"It must be observed that in Oakes' case the Board appears to have been dealing with the second limb of the subsection, the question being whether the donor was entirely excluded from any benefit to him of whatsoever kind or in any way whatsoever. It is possible that in the consideration of this very difficult part of the subsection it may be pertinent in some cases to inquire whether the benefit derived by the donor is one that impairs or detracts from the donee's enjoyment of the gift. Their Lordships, with great respect, think that this is a matter which may require further examination, but, as they have already said, they are clearly of opinion that it is not a relevant consideration where the question arises under the first limb of the subsection…." (449-450).
"…(section 102) is in one sense a penal section. Not only may you not have your cake and eat it, but if you eat more than a few de minimis crumbs of what was given, you are deemed for tax purposes to have eaten the lot" (p.304D-E)
"What, then, is the policy of section 102? It requires people to define precisely the interests which they are giving away and the interests, if any, which they are retaining. Once they have given away an interest they may not receive back any benefits from that interest. In Lang v Webb, 13 C.L.R. 503, 513 Isaacs J suggested that the policy was to avoid the "delay, expense and uncertainty" of requiring the revenue to investigate whether a gift was genuine or pretended. It laid down a rule that if the donor continued to derive any benefit from the property in which an interest had been given, it would be treated as a pretended gift unless the benefit could be shown to be referable to a specific proprietary interest which he had retained. This is probably the most plausible explanation and accepting this as the policy, I think there can be no doubt that the interest retained by Lady Ingram was a proprietary interest defined with the necessary precision." (305 B-C)
Lady Justice Black:
Lady Justice Gloster: