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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd & Anor, R (on the application of) v HM Treasury & Anor [2016] EWHC 279 (Admin) (17 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2016/279.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 279 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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R (on the application of (1) Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd and (2) FCE Bank PLC) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) Her Majesty's Treasury (2) The Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs |
Defendants |
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Elizabeth Wilson, Andrew Macnab and Aparna Nathan (instructed by The General Counsel and Solicitor to HM Revenue and Customs) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 3 February 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Whipple:
Introduction:
The legislation:
a) The RITP provide for corporation tax at 45% on restitution interest, which is interest defined by reference to a number of conditions. There are no reliefs or set-offs against this tax.
b) Condition (A) is that the interest is paid or payable in respect of a claim by a taxpayer for restitution on grounds of a mistake of law relating to a taxation matter or the unlawful collection of tax.
c) Condition (B) is that the court has made a final determination that the Commissioners are liable to pay the interest, or have entered into a final settlement of the claim under which the taxpayer company is entitled to interest.
d) Condition (C) is that the interest is not simple interest at a statutory rate.
e) On making a payment of interest which meets certain other conditions a deduction must be made on account of the tax. The amounts withheld in this way are to be treated as paid by the taxpayer on account of its liability to corporation tax on the interest payment as restitution interest. A notice must accompany the payment showing the gross amount of the payment and the amount withheld on account of tax.
f) The Commissioners can assess amounts chargeable to tax under the RITP in which event the company must pay the amount assessed within 30 days.
g) There is a right of appeal against any assessment or withholding to the First Tier Tribunal (Tax Chamber) (the "FTT").
The Claimants' circumstances
The chronology of litigation
1) The Restitution Interest Tax Provisions violate the UK's obligations under EU law to provide the Claimants with an adequate and effective remedy in respect of taxes unlawfully levied contrary to the principle of effectiveness and Article 47(1) CFREU.
2) They also contravene the established EU law and ECHR law principles of legal certainty, non-retroactivity and the protection of legitimate expectations.
3) By seeking to reverse the effect of final judicial rulings as to the appropriate and necessary remedy, the Restitution Interest Tax Provisions constitute an unjustified interference by the State in judicial proceedings contrary to general principles of EU law and ECHR law, including the rule of law and the requirement of separation of powers, and contrary to Article 6 ECHR and Article 47(2) CFREU.
4) The Restitution Interest Tax Provisions are contrary to Article 1 of Protocol 1 to the ECHR ("A1P1") and Article 17 CFREU.
5) The Restitution Interest Tax Provisions are discriminatory and contravene Article 14 ECHR."
".. the immediate and continuing prejudicial impact of the [RITP] on the Claimants' business and affairs and the conduct of their claims in the FII GLO …. In short, the unique prospect, if the [RITP] are lawful, of a tax charge potentially arising at an uncertain date in the future but then being backdated to an accounting period in the past gives rise to serious accounting issues and may cause severe commercial and reporting difficulties." (cf [7] of the Reasons for Urgency on the Form N463).
Appropriate Forum
a) Judicial review proceedings brought by The Prudential Assurance Co Ltd ("Prudential") under reference CO/6183/2015.
b) Gross payment applications issued by British American Tobacco (or companies in the BAT group, collectively referred to as "BAT") and 8 other members of the FII GLO in the Chancery Division seeking payment of their judgment debts gross of the 45% withholding.
c) Appeal by BAT (or companies in the BAT group) to the FTT, proceeding under consolidated tribunal reference TC/2015/06960, lodged on 1 December 2015 (the "BAT FTT appeal"). BAT challenges the withholding under RITP from a payment of interest.
d) An application made by Six Continents Ltd and other companies in its group to amend its pleadings in a case due for trial in the Chancery Division in May 2016. (This is the application on which Henderson J has now given judgment – see above.)
1) All of the issues including retrospectivity and legal certainty will arise in these proceedings, whereas that cannot be said the other way around. The BAT FTT appeal would only be a subset of these claims. As an adjunct to this point, he argued that Prudential's claim (a. above) should be consolidated with these claims and heard in the Administrative Court, because Prudential's tax position, absent the RITP, was very different from the Claimants', and the Court would have a better view of the issues by inclusion of another case on different facts.
2) No Declaration of Incompatibility is available in the FTT, and the remedies available in this Court are more apt to the issues raised.
3) There is an additional procedural difficulty in the BAT FTT appeal because there is a preliminary issue in that appeal relating to the validity of the notice served by the Commissioners on BAT, which BAT argues is defective. If BAT was to succeed on that point, then the FTT might decline to address the legal submissions; or if they did, then any reasoning given would be obiter. By proceeding in the Administrative Court, the parties could focus efforts on the core issues of lawfulness.
4) The Administrative Court is preferable, being a court of record. Any FTT decision would have to be appealed to the Upper Tribunal ("UT") if it was to have any binding effect on other cases.
5) This case has the "feel" of a judicial review rather than an appeal, because the attack is a root and branch attack on the structure of the tax.
1) As currently pleaded, BAT's appeal grounds are identical to the grounds advanced in this judicial review. It is right to say that BAT is challenging a withholding, which is not true of the Claimants. It may be that BAT's arguments on retrospectivity will take a slightly different shape in light of the different facts in BAT's case, but retrospectivity is certainly part of BAT's case on appeal, and Ms Wilson is right to say that retrospectivity remains an argument even in the context of a withholding (because the interest does not become restitution interest, as defined in the statute, unless and until the FII GLO is finalised). I therefore reject the proposition that the BAT FTT appeal is a "sub-set" of the Claimants' case. Rather, I conclude that the two cases are materially similar, at least so far as they relate to the headline issue of lawfulness of the RITP. Some aspects of the underlying facts of each case may differ, and that may become relevant in due course, but it is premature to descend to the minutiae of each case on its own facts while the central issue of law remains unexamined. Mr Margolin's proposition that Prudential's judicial review should be joined with this one, because Prudential's facts are different, serves to underline my point.
2) It is right to say that BAT's remedy in the FTT is different to the remedies sought on the judicial review. But I do not consider that to be a difference of any materiality, for reasons outlined above.
3) The fact that BAT raises an issue about the validity of the notice issued pursuant to the RITP does not justify proceeding in the Administrative Court, for a number of reasons. (i) the FTT will undoubtedly consider the substantive issue of legality, alongside any technical argument about the validity of the notice, both points being raised on the pleadings in the BAT FTT appeal. (ii) The fact that the FTT's conclusions on legality could be obiter is speculative and probably unimportant given the likelihood of an appeal by the unsuccessful party to the UT and beyond. (iii) If the notice issue really is a problem (which I doubt), then ICI will shortly be able to issue an appeal against the withholding in its case, and I trust that the Commissioners will produce a notice for ICI which is, on any view, compliant with the legislation. So there is another appeal in the offing which does not have the problem which the Claimants identify with the BAT appeal, and the problem can, if necessary, be cured in that way.
4) I fail to see that the FTT's status as an appeal tribunal, not a court of record, makes any real difference to the choice of forum. It is very likely there will be an appeal from the FTT to the UT, and possibly beyond, in any event.
5) I disagree that this case has the "feel" of a judicial review. I conclude that these challenges are well suited to the specialist jurisdiction of the FTT.
Case Management
Conclusion