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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 >> Revenue and Customs v Collins [2009] EWHC 284 (Ch) (20 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/284.html Cite as: [2009] STC 1077, [2009] BTC 91, [2009] EWHC 284 (Ch), [2009] STI 552, 79 TC 524 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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TIMOTHY MARK COLLINS |
Respondent |
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Mr James Rivett (instructed by Gregory Rowcliffe Milners) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 13 January 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Henderson:
Introduction and Background
"48 Consideration due after time of disposal
(1) In the computation of the gain consideration for the disposal shall be brought into account without any discount for postponement of the right to receive any part of it and, in the first instance, without regard to a risk of any part of the consideration being irrecoverable or to the right to receive any part of the consideration being contingent; and if any part of the consideration so brought into account subsequently proves to be irrecoverable, there shall be made, on a claim being made to that effect, such adjustment, whether by way of discharge or repayment of tax or otherwise, as is required in consequence."
"The Capital Gains computation is provisional as the final payments due under the Share Sale Agreement cannot be determined until after 28 February 2000."
"33 Error or mistake
(1) If a person who has paid income tax or capital gains tax under an assessment (whether a self-assessment or otherwise) alleges that the assessment was excessive by reason of some error or mistake in a return, he may by notice in writing at any time not later than five years after the 31 January next following the year of assessment to which the return relates, make a claim to the Board for relief.
(2) On receiving the claim the Board shall enquire into the matter and shall, subject to the provisions of this section, give by way of repayment such relief … in respect of the error or mistake as is reasonable and just:
…
(3) In determining the claim the Board shall have regard to all the relevant circumstances of the case, and in particular shall consider whether the granting of relief would result in the exclusion from charge to tax of any part of the profits of the claimant, and for this purpose the Board may take into consideration the liability of the claimant and assessments made on him in respect of chargeable periods other than that to which the claim relates.
…
(5) In this section "profits" –
(a) in relation to income tax, means income, and
(b) in relation to capital gains tax, means chargeable gains,
(c) … "
"Dear Mr Collins
Paragraph 7(1), (2) & (3) of Schedule 1A Taxes Management Act 1970
I have now completed my enquiry into your claim for a reduction in your capital gains tax liability for 1998-1999 under Section 48 [TCGA 1992]. I have concluded that the pension contribution of £95179 is not an allowable deduction for capital gains purposes under Section 37 TCGA 1992. Thank you for your help during my enquiry. A copy of this notice is being sent to your agent.
Disallowance
I disallow your claim.
[Information was then given about rights of appeal]"
"7(1) An enquiry under paragraph 5 is completed when an officer of the Board by notice (a "closure notice") informs the claimant that he has completed his enquiries and states his conclusions.
(2) In the case of a claim for discharge or repayment of tax, the closure notice must either –
(a) state that in the officer's opinion no amendment of the claim is required, or
(b) if in the officer's opinion the claim is insufficient or excessive, amend the claim so as to make good or eliminate the deficiency or excess.
…
(3) In the case of a claim that is not a claim for discharge or repayment of tax, the closure notice must either –
(a) allow the claim, or
(b) disallow the claim, wholly or to such extent as appears to the officer appropriate."
"(a) any conclusion stated or amendment made by a closure notice under paragraph 7(2) above, or
(b) any decision contained in a closure notice under paragraph 7(3)."
On 24 October 2006, Mr Collins' accountants, Powrie Appleby LLP, appealed on his behalf against the closure notice embodied in the inspector's letter of 26 September. The first stated ground of appeal was that the contribution of £95,179 to Mr Collins' pension fund was not consideration for CGT purposes. The second and third grounds contended that, even if it were consideration, it had to be left out of account for CGT purposes because it was taken into account for income tax purposes and was therefore excluded by section 37 of TCGA 1992, subsection (1) of which provides as follows:
"37(1) There shall be excluded from the consideration for a disposal of assets taken into account in the computation of the gain any money or money's worth charged to income tax as income of, or taken into account as a receipt in computing income or profits or gains or losses of, the person making the disposal for the purposes of the Income Tax Acts."
The substantive appeal
"At Completion the Purchaser shall:
4.4.1 pay to Mr Collins and/or the Company at his direction and to Mr Remington on account of the cash consideration for the Shares the sums specified in Schedule 2; …"
"The Consideration for the Shares shall be calculated and paid on the terms set out in this Schedule".
Paragraph 2 contained definitions, and paragraph 3 then provided as follows:
"3. On Completion the Purchaser shall, on account of the Consideration:
3.1.1 pay the sum of £15,267 by cheque to Mr Collins:
3.1.2 pay the sum of £95,179 to the Company, at the direction of Mr Collins. The Purchaser shall then procure that, immediately following completion, the Company makes a pension contribution on behalf of Mr Collins, of £120,480 (to a scheme or policy designated by Mr Collins). In the event that the Company receives the benefit of deducting part or all or [sic] that expense for corporation tax purposes it shall, when it receives the benefit thereof, pay a cheque equivalent to the amount of the benefit to Mr Collins up to a maximum of £25,301.
3.2 Issue to Mr Remington 1092 A and 1092 B Consideration Shares.
3.3 Pay the sums of £80,426 and £176.74 by cheques to Mr Remington."
"What is the relevant consideration may depend upon the terms and form of the transaction adopted by the parties. The parties to a proposed transaction frequently can achieve the same practical and economic result by different methods. Take for example the position of the owners of the entire issued capital of a company with gross assets of £2 million and net assets (after discharging a debt of £1 million owed to the owner or someone else) of £1 million. The shares are worth £1 million, but would be increased to £2 million if the owner at his own cost and for the benefit of the company released or discharged the debt. In this situation, the owner may agree to sell his shares for £1 million or, on condition that he first releases or discharges the debt, for £2 million. The law respects the freedom of the parties to a transaction to frame and formulate their agreement as they wish and to suit their own legitimate interests (taxation and otherwise) and, so long as the form adopted is genuine, and not a sham, honest, and not a fraud on someone else, and does not contravene some established principle of public policy, the court will give effect to the method adopted. But as a corollary to this freedom, where the parties have chosen one method, it is not open to them to invite the court to treat as adopted some other method because it is more advantageous to them, because it leads to the same practical and economic result and because it is the more obvious and sensible method to have adopted. If the question is raised what method has been adopted and the transaction is in writing, the answer must be found in the true construction of the document or documents read in the light of all the relevant circumstances. If the terms of the documents are clear, that is the end of the question. If however there is any doubt or ambiguity upon the language used read in its proper context, it may be possible to resolve that doubt or ambiguity by reference to the inherent probabilities of businessmen entering into the transaction in one form rather than another."
"Certain principles can be deduced from the speeches of Lord Wilberforce and Lord Fraser (with whom Lord Keith concurred): (1) the guiding principle underlying any interpretation of the relevant legislation lies in its purposes to tax capital gains arrived at upon normal principles: the court should hesitate before accepting results which are paradoxical and contrary to business sense; (2) it is necessary to identify and concentrate upon the asset disposed of and the consideration for such disposal; and (3) any written contract must be read as a whole construed in the light of all relevant circumstances which include the value of the assets disposed of and business sense."
"In this case Mr Collins did not receive £95,179 and the benefit of a contribution of £120,480 paid to his pension fund. What he received was a contribution to his pension fund of £120,480 paid by the Company which was funded by the payment to the Company of £95,179 by the Purchaser shortly after it became the owner of the shares and by the corporation tax benefit from making the payment …"
As I have already tried to explain, the fact that Mr Collins did not himself receive the £95,179 is irrelevant, because it was paid at his direction to the Company; and what was then done by the Company with that sum is equally irrelevant, because the focus is on the wrong payment. Instead of answering the question of what the consideration consisted of, it answers the question of what was done with the consideration by the Company pursuant to the terms of the Share Sale Agreement. With the greatest respect to the Commissioner, it seems to me that these fallacies run through his discussion of the issue in paragraphs 11 to 15 of the Decision, and are reflected in his conclusion in paragraph 15 that:
"the plain wording and effect of the document was that Mr Collins did not receive the £95,179 and his role was only to trigger the payment between the Purchaser and the Company."
Questions of procedure and jurisdiction
(a) the sum of £15,267 payable to Mr Collins on completion of the Share Sale Agreement;
(b) the further sum of £25,301 payable to him pursuant to paragraph 3.1.2 of Schedule 2; and
(c) as to the balance of £352,252, an estimate by Mr Collins (or more probably his accountant) of the value of the deferred consideration payable to him on the first, second and third anniversaries of completion.
"… seems clearly to be referring to consideration of an ascertained amount. It is appropriate for dealing with a debt which cannot increase in value, but may decrease if it proves to be partly irrecoverable."
(a) whether any consideration to which the section applies was originally brought into account in the stipulated manner, and (if so)
(b) whether any part of the consideration so brought into account has subsequently proved to be irrecoverable.
The claim cannot be used by the Revenue as a second opportunity to bring into charge part of the original consideration which could never have fallen within section 48 in the first place.
Conclusion