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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Byrom, Kane & Kane (t/a Salon 24) v Revenue & Customs [2006] EWHC 111 (Ch) (07 February 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/111.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 111 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE VAT & DUTIES TRIBUNAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
BYROM, KANE & KANE Trading as SALON 24 |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS OF HM REVENUE & CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
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Valentina Sloane (instructed by The Commissioners of HM Revenue & Customs) for the
Respondents
Hearing dates: 18th January 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Warren :
Introduction
The facts
a. The rent to the masseuse of a room on the day or days chosen by her.
b. The current rate was stated to be £110 per day which had to be paid in advance on the day of hire of the room.
c. The rent paid included costs "towards the use of our laundry facilities, charges to ourselves from Roynet for credit card payment by your clients and advertising".
d. Upon payment of the rent, the masseuse was to be allocated a room solely for her use during the day, opening hours being 10am to 10pm 7 days per week with possible closure on bank holidays".
"20. The Appellants' case depends on our accepting that, even with an exclusive licence to occupy a room, a masseuse could realistically be regarded as carrying on her business within that room. In our judgment, she could not reasonably be so regarded. Mrs Kane's evidence made it plain to us that a masseuse does not carry on a business solely with the room allocated to her. For instance, the licence makes no provision for a masseuse or her customers to gain access to her room from the street, but, even it if did, or it were to be implied, it is clear that she carries out only a small part of her business within the room. And whilst it might be possible for her to dispense with the Appellants' security services and cash handling facilities, for safety reasons they, too are essential. We accept that use of lockers, and the day room may not be absolutely necessary, but they are ancillary matters that form part of the total package."
"21. Further, whilst the licence does provide for laundry facilities, Roynets' card handling arrangements and advertising, it does not include any facility for telephone answering, reception or customers, the waiting and other arrangement for customers both before and after receipt of a masseuse's services, and car parking, all of which are essential elements of a masseuse's business. (For the sake of clarity, we should say that we do not accept that the supplies of laundry facilities, card handling and advertising are subsumed in the supply of room rental).
22. Mr Gibbon's [for Salon 24] claim that the various supplies above listed are merely a means the better to enjoy the licence to occupy a room cannot, in our judgment, be accepted. For it to succeed, the Appellants would have to show that the licence would be sufficient for a masseuse to carry out her business, even if the services in question were not provided. Clearly that is not so. In our judgment, the Appellants are, and at all material times were, supplying to masseuses a package including the provision of various services.
23. We then turn to consider which, if any of those supplies is the principal one. In our judgment it is the supply of the various facilities in the salon including in particular the use of the telephone and reception system, the use of the waiting areas, the advertising and the card handling facilities.
24. Applying the Card Protection test, the only conclusion we can reach is that the Appellants make a single supply of a package of which the dominant part is the taxable supply of services to which an incidental part is the supply of a room. We therefore held that the Appellants' entire supplies are standard rated. We dismiss the appeal."
18. I shall return to the conclusions which the Tribunal draws in those paragraphs 20 to 24 later, but a question arises whether, in paragraph 20, the Tribunal is simply analysing the primary facts which it has found earlier in the Decision (and which I have set out above) or whether it is making further findings of fact. I think that they must be taken as finding further facts. The earlier findings make no reference to Mrs Kane's evidence about how the masseuses carry on business; but it is clear that, in this paragraph, the Tribunal is indeed relying on these aspects of Mrs Kane's evidence and must therefore be taken as making findings in relation to it.
The law
a. Sections 1 and 4 Value Added Tax Act 1994 ("VATA") charge VAT on a supply of goods or services in the UK. There is a supply for VAT purposes only where it is made for a consideration. VAT is charged on a taxable supply in the course of business; a taxable supply is a supply other than an exempt supply.
b. Section 31 provides, so far as relevant, that a supply is an exempt supply if it is of a description for the time being specified in Schedule 9.
c. Schedule 9 is divided into Groups. Group 1 specifies, so far as relevant, in Item 1 the "grant of any interest in or right over land or licence to occupy land",
d. Section 31 and Schedule 9 reflect (and insofar as possible is to be interpreted in the light of) Article 13 of EC Council Directive 77/388 ("the Sixth Directive"). Exemption is to be provided from VAT for "the leasing or letting of immovable property…".
"[26] In the Court of Appeal ([2003] STC 169), Aldous LJ said that the classification of the transaction as a supply of services or of goods and services was a question of law. He cited in support the decision of this House in Customs and Excise Comrs v British Telecommunications plc [1999] STC 758 at 763, [1999] 1 WLR 1376 at 1381 in which Lord Slynn of Hadley said that the 'characterisation of the supply as provided for here in the contractual documents is a matter of law'. Aldous LJ pointed out that the facts found by the tribunal were not in dispute. The issue was as to their legal consequences.
[27] In my opinion the weight of authority supports the view of the Court of Appeal on this point. The courts have not treated VAT classification in the same way as some questions of classification (for example, whether a contract is of service or for services) which, notwithstanding that there are no facts in dispute, are deemed to be questions of fact so as to exclude on appeal on a question of law: see the discussion in Moyna v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2003] UKHL 44 at [22]–[25], [2003] 1 WLR 1929 at [22]–[25]. On the other hand, as Lord Hope of Craighead said in the British Telecommunications case ([1999] STC 758 at 768, [1999] 1 WLR 1376 at 1386) the question is one of fact and degree, taking account of all the circumstances. In such cases it is customary for an appellate court to show some circumspection before interfering with the decision of the tribunal merely because it would have put the case on the other side of the line."
This need for circumspection was emphasised by Lord Walker at paragraph 36 of his speech in College of Estate Management v Customs & Excise Commissioners which I come to later.
"[30] Aldous LJ acknowledged that 'at a particular level of generality' it could be said that there was one transaction. But he said that when a doctor administered a drug to a patient he was 'in reality dispensing the drug to the patient and then administering it'. Chadwick LJ likewise divided the transaction into three elements: first, the consultation and diagnosis, secondly the supply of the drug for the purposes of treatment and thirdly its administration. The first stage, he said, was 'dissociable' from the second and third and constituted a separate supply. Although there might be some medical skill involved at the third stage, the dominant element was the supply of the drug and it was therefore to be classified as a supply of goods.
[31] Besides raising the question of what authority a doctor would have to dispense drugs to patients who were not reg 20 patients, this approach seems to me to involve the kind of artificial dissection of the transaction which the Court of Justice warned against in its judgment in the Card Protection case para 29. In my opinion the level of generality which corresponds with social and economic reality is to regard the transaction as the patient's visit to the doctor for treatment and not to split it into smaller units. If one takes this view, then in my opinion the correct classification is that which the NHS has always taken of the personal administration of drugs to non-reg 20 patients, namely that there is a single supply of services."
a. Although, normally, every supply of a service is to be regarded as distinct and independent, nonetheless there are cases where the taxpayer is to be regarded as making a single supply even though it comprises more than one element. The ECJ in Card Protection Plan Ltd had highlighted the case where there is a principal supply and an ancillary, or accessory, supply. But there can be cases where a taxpayer is involved in a transaction in which he performs several services, none of which can be singled out as the dominant or principal supply and where it may be necessary to consider, for VAT purposes, whether those services are to be regarded as elements of a single supply (for example the restaurant services in Faaborg-Gelting Linien A/S).
b. That point would scarcely be worth re-emphasising, he considered, were it not for the position adopted by the Commissioners that the printed material supplied by the College was ancillary to the principal supply of education. He considered that the supply of that material was by far the main method by which the College provided students with an education. In contrast, the ECJ in Card Protection Plan Ltd explained that an element is properly to be regarded as ancillary where it is not the principal supply but is accessory to it and so shares the tax treatment of the principal supply. He says "…it would be highly artificial, to say the least, to describe the printed materials as nothing more than a means for the students the better to enjoy the education supplied by the College. In reality, those materials were the means by which the students obtained most of their education".
c. "But the mere fact that the supply of the printed materials cannot be described as ancillary does not mean that it is to be regarded as a separate supply for tax purposes…..One still has to decide…. whether the College should properly be regarded as making a separate supply of the printed materials or, rather, a single supply of education, of which the provision of the printed material is simply one element". To answer that, one does not simply look at what the taxable person actually did since he will, in point of fact, actually have made a number of supplies. The criterion to be applied is whether there is a single supply "from an economic point of view"; and, if so, that supply should not be artificially split, so as not to distort the functioning of the VAT system. The answer will, accordingly, "be found by ascertaining the essential features of the transaction under which the taxable person is operating when supplying the consumer, regarded as a typical consumer". The key lies in analysing the transaction.
"[30] In the course of this appeal there has been much discussion of para 30 of the ECJ's judgment. In my opinion it is clear that this paragraph (which uses the introductory words 'in particular') is dealing with a particular case exemplified by Madgett and Baldwin. It is not asserting that every distinct element of a supply must be a separate supply for VAT purposes unless it is 'ancillary'. 'Ancillary' means (as Ward LJ rightly observed ([2004] STC 1471 at [39]) subservient, subordinate and ministering to something else. It was an entirely apposite term in the discussion in British Telecommunications (where the delivery of the car was subordinate to its sale) and in Card Protection Plan itself (where some peripheral parts of a package of services, and some goods of trivial value such as labels, key tabs and a medical card, were subordinate to the main package of insurance services). But there are other cases (including Faaborg, Beynon and the present case) in which it is inappropriate to analyse the transaction in terms of what is 'principal' and 'ancillary', and it is unhelpful to strain the natural meaning of 'ancillary' in an attempt to do so. Food is not ancillary to restaurant services; it is of central and indispensable importance to them; nevertheless there is a single supply of services (Faaborg). Pharmaceuticals are not ancillary to medical care which requires the use of medication; again, they are of central and indispensable importance; nevertheless there is a single supply of services (Beynon)."
"The notion of a core or principal supply, and indeed the conception of a dichotomy between single and multiple supplies, are not I think themselves creatures of the Sixth Directive (or the national legislation). They have been developed by the courts as a technique for use in the task of ensuring the fair and proper tax treatment, in light of the VAT legislation properly construed, of a taxpayer's activities in cases where that would not be achieved if the activities were viewed singly and in isolation…..".
"53. I should with diffidence like to make one or two observations about this learning. I am sure with very great respect that Millett LJ did not intend, in the first four sentences of the passage I have just cited, to indicate that in every case where multiple supplies properly fall to be treated as a single supply for fiscal purposes there is always a single or unitary dominant supply to which all the other supplies in question are then regarded as ancillary. That, certainly, is one case; but there may be others where the single supply that is arrived at for VAT purposes consists, not in one supply to which others are ancillary, but in a bundle of supplies none of which predominates over the others; the single supply may, as it were, be an apex or a table-top. There is thus a difference between what is 'ancillary' and what is 'integral': several supplies may be 'integral' to one another, with none predominating….The services of a hotelier (compare the facts of the Madgett case) are perhaps an example……"
I would add to that that several elements – Laws LJ uses the word "supplies" but he does so, I think, using that word in its ordinary sense rather than its technical VAT sense – can constitute a single supply even where one element is dominant: dominance does not necessary identify the overall supply: see for instance the decision of the House of Lords in Dr Beynon & Partners.
"55. But there is, I think, one further complication. Where the core supply is on the table-top model—a congeries of supplies which are integral to each other or 'indissociable'—it may not be self-evident from the description of the core supply at which the court or tribunal arrives what its tax treatment should be. In that case, it will be necessary to look again at the elements which comprise the core, and arrive at a decision on the facts whether, numerically if nothing else, the taxable or exempt elements predominate. Necessarily no such difficulty arises where the core supply is on the apex model."
"Finally, account should be taken of the fact that permission to use a golf course will normally be restricted as regards the purpose for which it is used and the period of its use. According to the case law of the court, the period of enjoyment of immovable property is an essential element of a lease….".
The reasoning of the Tribunal
Conclusion