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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Forthright (Wales) Ltd v HM Inspector of Taxes [2004] EWHC 524 (Ch) (18 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/524.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 524 (Ch), [2004] STI 894, [2004] STC 875, [2004] BTC 298 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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FORTHRIGHT (WALES) LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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A L DAVIES (HM INSPECTOR OF TAXES) |
Respondent |
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Mr Bruce Carr (instructed by Solicitor of Inland Revenue, Somerset House, Strand, London WC2R 1LB) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 10th March 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lightman:
INTRODUCTION
FACTS
REQUIREMENT OF CLOSURE NOTICE
"(1) A claim for relief in respect of eligible shares issued by a company in any year of assessment shall be made?
...(b) not later than the fifth anniversary of the 31st January next following that year of assessment.
(2) No claim for relief in respect of eligible shares in a company may be made unless the person making the claim has received from the company a certificate issued by the company in such form as the Board may direct and certifying that the conditions for the relief, so far as applying to the company and the trade, are satisfied in relation to those shares.
(3) Before issuing a certificate for the purposes of subsection (2) above a company shall furnish the inspector with a statement to the effect that it satisfies the conditions for relief…
(4) No such certificate shall be issued without the authority of the inspector…
(5) Any statement under subsection (3) above shall contain such information as the Board may reasonably require, shall be in such form as the Board may direct and shall contain a declaration that it is correct to the best of the company's knowledge and belief.
(10) For the purposes of the provisions of the [TMA] relating to appeals against decisions on claims, the refusal of the inspector to authorise the issue of a certificate under subsection (2) above shall be taken to be a decision refusing a claim made by the company."
Schedule 1A paragraph 5 of the TMA provides that an officer of the Board may enquire into a claim made by any person if before the end of the period specified he gives notice of his intention to do so to that person. Schedule 1A paragraphs 7(1) and 7(3A) provide that, where an officer of the Board has given such a notice and the claim is not for discharge or repayment of tax, if the officer is of the opinion that the claim should be disallowed in whole or in part, the officer shall within the period specified give notice under paragraph 7(3A) to the taxpayer of the extent to which he is disallowing the claim. Schedule 1A paragraph 9(1)(b) of the TMA provides that an appeal may be brought against:
"(b) a decision contained in a notice under paragraph 7(3A) above."
USE OF MONIES RAISED
"(1) For the purposes of this Chapter, an individual is eligible for relief subject to the provisions of this Chapter, if –
(a) eligible shares in a qualifying company [an unquoted company which exists wholly for the purpose of carrying on one or more qualifying trades] for which he has subscribed are issued to him and, under section 291, he qualifies for relief in respect of those shares,
(b) the shares are issued in order to raise money for the purpose of a qualifying business activity, …..
(c) the money raised by the issue is employed not later than the time mentioned in subsection (3) below wholly for the purpose of that activity.
(2) In this Chapter 'qualifying business activity', in relation to a company, means-
(a) the company or any subsidiary -
(i) carrying on a qualifying trade which, on the date the shares are issued, it is carrying on, or
(ii) preparing to carry on a qualifying trade which, on that date, it intends to carry on wholly or mainly in the United Kingdom and which it begins to carry on within two years after that date,
but only if, at any time in the relevant period when the qualifying trade is carried on, it is carried on wholly or mainly in the United Kingdom,".
"(1) the money raised by the share issue must be used wholly for the purpose of the qualifying business activity;
(2) the qualifying business activity means the carrying on (or preparing to carry on) the qualifying trade;
(3) the money must therefore be used wholly for the purpose of carrying on (or preparing to carry on) the qualifying trade;
(4) part of the money raised was used to pay dividends to investors - that part cannot be said to have been used for the purpose of the trade;
(5) it could not therefore be said that the whole of the money raised had been used for the purposes of the trade."
i) the broad statutory purpose of Part VII Chapter III of the 1988 Act is to provide for relief where individuals invest in companies and those companies use the money raised for the purpose of the qualifying business activity. It cannot reasonably have been intended to allow a company to use the money raised for any purpose, and in particular for the purpose of making dividend payments to the investors as shareholders;
ii) the statutory language "qualifying business activity" is a pointer to a requirement of user of monies raised for an activity or trade. It is scarcely apposite in this context as a description of a company;
iii) Forthright's construction renders redundant the words which immediately follow "carrying on a qualifying trade" and "preparing to carry on a qualifying trade, namely "which, on the date the shares are issued, it is carrying on" and "which, on that date, it intends to carry on" respectively. These words are however entirely meaningful on the Revenue's construction;
iv) section 289(3) provides that the condition in section 289(1)(c) that the money raised is employed wholly for the purposes of the qualifying business activity shall not fail to be satisfied because an amount which is not significant is employed for another purpose. That provision is again a pointer to the requirement for raising and expending for the purpose of carrying on the qualifying trade and not for the general purposes of the company; and
v) the statutory predecessor of section 289 of the 1988 Act relating to business expansion schemes required the monies to be raised for the qualifying trade or activity and not for the purposes of the company carrying on that trade or activity, and there is no apparent reason why this requirement can have been intended to be dispensed with or watered down in the current legislation.
"I think that the payment of these damages was not money expended 'for the purposes of the trade'. These words are used in other rules and appear to me to mean for the purpose of enabling a person to carry on and earn profits in the trade etc. I think the disbursements permitted are such as are made for that purpose. It is not enough that the disbursement is made in the course of, or arises out of, or is connected with, the trade, or is made out of the profits of the trade. It must be made for the purpose of earning the profits."
By parity of reason a payment of dividends to investors is not made "for the purpose" of the trade or for the purpose of earning profit.
CONCLUSION