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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Cadbury Schweppes Plc & Anor v HM Inspector of Taxes [2005] EWHC 1610 (Ch) (21 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/1610.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 1610 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Cadbury Schweppes Plc Cadbury Schweppes Overseas Ltd |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Williams (HM Inspector of Taxes) |
Defendant |
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Ms Ingrid Simler (instructed by HM Revenue & Customs) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 14,15 June 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Etherton :
Introduction
The relevant facts
"11. Prior to the transactions the subject of the appeal the Appellants received a prospectus from a merchant bank about what was called an "accrued income scheme". The prospectus stated that the merchant bank had developed a proprietary inter-company loan instrument which had an unusual payment profile. If the First Appellant were to invest £100M in a bond, and then to dispose of it after eleven months, it would realise a capital gain of £5.5M which the First Appellant could shelter by using capital losses within the group. The new structure involved the issue of a bond with an uneven payment profile. The optimum after-tax return would be derived if the bond were sold just before the first interest payment date. The scheme was stated to be designed to defeat the provisions of sections 713 and 714 of the 1988 Act under which, where a security is purchased with accrued interest, and money is paid for that interest, that money is deemed to be income and not capital. The Appellants adopted the principles of the scheme.
12. Accordingly, on 15 September 1994, in consideration of an advance from the First Appellant to an associated company called Cadbury Schweppes Finance Limited (Finance), Finance issued six loan notes to the First Appellant. The nominal value of each note was £25M and each note was redeemable on 15 December 1995. Paragraph 2 of the loan notes provided, in so far as relevant:
"2 Interest
(A) The principal amount of the Note shall carry interest at the fixed rate of 7.43375 per cent. per annum for the period from (and including) the Issue Date … to (but excluding) the Maturity Date or the date on which it is earlier redeemed in accordance with the terms of paragraph 4 (the "Early Redemption Date") which shall be calculated on the basis of actual days elapsed (but without any compounding) and a year of 365 days and shall be paid as described in paragraph 2(B).
(B) The interest on this Note (calculated in accordance with paragraph 2(A)) shall be paid as follows:
Payment Date Amount of interest to be paid
(I) On 15 June 1995 … £152,748.29
(II) On 15 September 1995 … £1,705,689.21
(iii) On the Maturity Date £463,336.47
or
On the Early Redemption Date: An amount equal to interest for the period from (and including) the Issue Date to (but excluding) the Early Redemption Date less, if the early Redemption Date falls after the First Interest Payment Date, an amount equal to the interest payable on the First Interest Payment Date and, if the Early Redemption Date falls after the Second Interest Payment Date, an amount equal to the interest payable on the Second Interest Payment Date."
13. Thus each note provided that interest was payable by irregular amounts on three specified dates. These dates, together with the months which elapsed from the issue date, the amount of payment due, and the equivalent months of interest which the amount of each payment represented, were:
Date interest payable | Months after issue | Amount of interest | Months of interest |
15 June 1995 | nine | £152,748.29 | one |
15 September 1995 | twelve | £1,705,689.21 | eleven |
15 December 1995 | fifteen | £463,336.47 | three |
14. Thus it will be seen that no interest at all was payable for nine months after which approximately one month's interest became payable. No further interest was payable until the anniversary of the loan notes (15 September 1995) when approximately all the outstanding interest was payable. When the loan notes were redeemed on 15 December 1995 the remaining three months' interest was payable.
On 30 May 1995 (that is, before the first interest date) the First Appellant assigned the loan notes to the Second Appellant for £157,913,679. On 31 May 1995 the Second Appellant assigned the loan notes to Lloyds Bank for £158,138,679
16. On 9 July 1998 the Inspector of Taxes wrote to the Appellants saying that it was his view that the loan notes were variable rate securities within section 717 of the 1998 Act. The consequence of the loan notes falling within section 717 was that the accrued amount of interest on the transfer was such amount as the Inspector decided was just and reasonable. The Inspector considered that the just and reasonable amounts to be included as Case VI income for the year ending on 31 December 1995 were:
The First Appellant 257
365 x £11,150,625 = £7,851,261
The Second Appellant 1
365 x £11,150,625 = £30,549.
17. The just and reasonable amounts calculated by the Inspector, of £7,851,261 for the First Appellant and £30,549 for the Second Appellant, made a total of £7,811,810. These sums represented the amount that accrued on a straight line basis on the loan notes in the hands of the respective holders prior to the respective settlement dates."
The relevant legislation
"710. Meaning of "securities", "transfer" etc. for purposes of sections 711 to 728;
….
(2) "Securities" … includes any loan stock or similar security -
(a) whether of the government of the United Kingdom, any other government, any public or local authority in the United Kingdom or elsewhere, or any company or other body; and
(b) whether or not secured, whether or not carrying a right to interest of a fixed amount or at a fixed rate per cent of the nominal value of the securities, and whether or not in bearer form.
….
(5) "Transfer", in relation to securities, means transfer by way of sale, exchange, gift or otherwise.
…."
"711. Meaning of "interest", "transfers with or without accrued interest" etc.
….
(2) An interest payment day, in relation to securities, is a day on which interest on them is payable; …
….
(5) Securities are transferred with accrued interest if they are transferred with the right to receive interest payable on -
(a) the settlement day, if that is an interest payment day; or
(b) the next (or first) interest payment day to fall after the settlement day, in any other case;
…
(7) The interest applicable to securities for an interest period is … the interest payable on them on the interest payment day with which the period ends.
…"
"712. Meaning of "settlement day" for purposes of sections 712 to 728
…
(3) Where the consideration for the transfer is money alone, and the transferee agrees to pay the whole of it on or before the next (or first) interest payment day to fall after an agreement for transfer is made, the settlement day is the day on which he agrees to make the payment ...
"713. Deemed sums and reliefs
(1) Subject to sections 714 to 728, this section applies whether the securities in question are transferred before, on or after 6th April 1988 and in this section references to a period are references to the interest period in which the settlement day falls.
(2) If securities are transferred with accrued interest -
(a) the transferor shall be treated as entitled to a sum on them in the period of an amount equal to the accrued amount; and
(b) the transferee shall be treated as entitled to relief on them in the period of the same amount
….
(4) In subsection (2) above "the accrued amount" means -
(a) if the securities are transferred under an arrangement by virtue of which the transferee accounts to the transferor separately for the consideration for the securities and for gross interest accruing to the settlement day, an amount equal to the amount (if any) of gross interest so accounted for; and
(b) in any other case, an amount equal to the accrued proportion of the interest applicable to the securities for the period.
….
(6) In this section -
(a) the accrued portion is - A
B
….
where –
A is the number of days in the period up to (and including) the
settlement day, and
B is the number of days in the period."
"714. Treatment of deemed sums and reliefs
(1) Subsection (2) below applies if a person is treated as entitled under section 713 to a sum on securities of a particular kind in an interest period, and either –
(a) he is not treated as entitled under that section to relief on securities of that kind in the period; or
(b) the sum (or total sum) to which he is treated as entitled exceeds the amount (or total amount) or relief to which he is treated as entitled under that section on securities of that kind in the period.
(2) The person shall be treated as receiving on the day the period ends annual profits or gains whose amount is (depending on whether subsection (1)(a) or (1)(b) above applies) equal to the sum (or total sum) to which he is treated as entitled or equal to the amount of the excess; and the profits or gains shall be chargeable to tax under Case VI of Schedule D for the chargeable period in which they are treated as received.
"717. Variable interest rate
(1) This section applies to securities other than securities falling within subsection (2) or (4) below.
(2) Securities fall within this subsection if their terms of issue provide that throughout the period from issue to redemption (whenever redemption might occur) they are to carry interest at a rate which falls into one, and one only, of the following categories -
(a) a fixed rate which is the same throughout the period;
(b) a rate which bears to a standard published base rate the same fixed relationship throughout the period;
(c) a rate which bears to a published index of prices the same fixed relationship throughout the period.
(3) In subsection (2)(c) above "published index of prices" means the retail prices index or any similar general index of prices which is published by, or by an agent of, the government of any territory outside the United Kingdom.
(4) Securities fall within this subsection if they are deep discount securities and the rate of interest for each (or their only) interest period is equal to or less than the yield to maturity.
(5) In subsection (4) above "deep discount securities" and "yield to maturity" have the same meanings as in Schedule 4; and for the purposes of that subsection the rate of interest for an interest period is, in relation to securities, the rate of return (expressed as a percentage) attributable to the interest applicable to them for the interest period.
(6) Subsections (7) to (11) below apply if securities to which this section applies are transferred at any time between the time they are issued and the time they are redeemed.
(7) If the securities are transferred without accrued interest they shall be treated for the purposes of sections 710 to 728 as transferred with accrued interest.
(8) The person entitled to the securities immediately before they are redeemed shall be treated for the purposes of those sections as transferring them with accrued interest on the day they are redeemed.
(9) Where there is a transfer as mentioned in subsection (6) above or by virtue of subsection (8) above, section 713 shall have effect with the omission of subsection (2)(b) and with the substitution for subsections (3) to (6) of the following subsection-
"(3) In subsection (2) above "the accrued amount" means such amount (if any) as an inspector decides is just and reasonable; and the jurisdiction of the General Commissioners of the Special Commissioners on any appeal shall include jurisdiction to review such decision of the inspector.
…"
The Decision
The Appellants' case
"62. Exempted debts for those purposes
(1) A debt is an exempted debt for the purposes of sections 63 to 66 below at any time if each of the first, second and third conditions mentioned below-
(a) is fulfilled at that time;
(b) has been fulfilled throughout so much of the period of the debt as falls before that time; and
(c) is likely to be fulfilled throughout so much of that period as falls after that time.
(2) The first condition is that the terms of the debt provide that any interest carried by it shall be at a rate which falls in to one, and one only, of the following categories-
(a) a fixed rate which is the same throughout the period of the debt;
(b) a rate which bears to a standard published rate the same fixed relationship throughout that period;
(c) a rate which bears to a published index of prices the same fixed relationship throughout that period.
(3) The second condition is that those terms provide for any such interest to be payable as it accrues at intervals of 12 months or less."
…."
"If the amount of interest payable before and after any date in the period from issue to redemption is relevant to calculate the interest rate carried at any particular time during the life of the Note, calculating the interest rate on the Note from 1st January to 14th June (5 payments over 167 days) and from 1st January to 16th June (6 payments over 169 days) produces two different results and would mean that the "rate" of the Notes was not "fixed" (that the Note did not "carry" interest at the same rate throughout the period from issue to redemption on all possible redemption dates, which may not, of course, be interest payment days). Only daily interest payments could avoid this result, or if the comparisons were only made between interest payment days and no other dates within the period from issue to redemption (this is impermissible: the rate must be the same "throughout" the period from issue to redemption). This demonstrates the absurdity of using the amounts of interest which are due and payable to calculate the "rate" of interest "carried" by a Note at any particular time."
"On the Special Commissioners' approach, the following security is not a fixed interest note: suppose the security has an issue price of £100, with interest payable at 10% simple interest per annum. In Years 1 and 2 the interest payments are deferred. In Years 3 and 4 £10 interest is paid in each of those years. In Year 5 £30 interest is paid (10% for each of Years 1, 2 and 5). It means any deferral of interest will prevent any security from being a fixed interest security. This is absurd."
"The Special Commissioners' approach also means that the following security is not a fixed interest security: suppose the security has an issue price of £1,000, with interest payable at 6% per annum (simple interest). Suppose it is issued on 31st December 2004, with interest payable in equal instalments of £5 on the last business day of each month. Different months have different numbers of days. Weekends and holidays exacerbate the difference by varying the date on which the last business day will fall. This means that the period between payments are irregular, but the amount payable is constant, and so the Special Commissioners' approach gives a variable "rate of interest". In this example, the first three payment dates are 30th January 2005, 27th February 2005 and 31st March 2005 giving interest "rates" of:-
(i) first period of 30 days - (£5/(£,1000 x 30/365))
x 100 = 6.1%
(ii) second period of 28 days - (£5/(£1,000 x 28/365))
x 100 = 6.53%
(iii) third period of 33 days - (£5/(£1,000 x 33/365))
x 100 = 5.55%.
This security can only be brought within the notion of a "fixed interest" security within Section 717(2)(a) by using a year as the relevant unit of time rather than a month. This is arbitrary. Nothing in Section 717(2) permits the selection of a year, rather than a month, as a relevant unit of time to determine the rate of interest. Rather only one unit of time is relevant, the period from issue to redemption."
"How can the relationship with interest and the comparator rates in Section 717(2)(b) (and indeed Section 717(2)(c)) be "fixed" if "fixed" requires consideration of amounts due and payable? An amount of interest due and payable after a change in, say, published base rates, cannot have the same relationship to a published base rate, where that base rate changes during an interest period (that is on a date falling between two interest payment days), as an amount due and payable for an interest period where the base rate does not change (because the first amount of interest, at the time when it is payable, would have been partially calculated, before becoming payable, by reference to the old base rate). Thus the Special Commissioners' approach prevents virtually all securities from falling within section 717(2)(b) and (c), since it is always possible that a comparator rate might change between two interest payment days."
Analysis
"Reliance was placed on the decision of the House of Lords in Kirkness v John Hudson & Co Ltd. [1955] A.C. 696 and, particularly, on the speech of Viscount Simonds in that case, for the proposition that, where earlier legislation is ambiguous, recourse may be had to subsequent legislation as an aid to its construction. Now undoubtedly that case is authority for the proposition, but it is essential for its application that there is first established an ambiguity in the earlier legislation. It is clear from Viscount Simonds's speech, and from that of Lord Reid, that "ambiguity" in this context does not mean merely that different minds may come to different conclusions as to the meaning (see pp. 711, 713 and 735). If subsequent legislation is to be invoked, the earlier provision must be such that, to use Lord Buckmaster's phrases in Ormond Investment Co. v Betts [1928] A.C. 143, 154, 156, it is "open to two perfectly clear and plain constructions" or "fairly and equally open to divers meanings" (emphasis supplied). The same notion is to be found in the Ormond case in the speeches of Viscount Sumner and Lord Atkinson. Viscount Sumner at p. 159 expressed reference to subsequent legislation as permissible where there is no reason, on the face of the prior Act, why one construction should be more right than another, and Lord Atkinson at p. 164 expressed the principle as applying where the Act was "readily" capable of more than one interpretation.
It is, as it seems to me, clear from this that it is not enough to show simply that there are two arguable constructions. One has to go further and show that they are both equally tenable, and that there are no indications in the Act under construction favouring one rather than the other."
Decision