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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 >> HM Revenue & Customs v Lansdowne Partners Ltd Partnership [2010] EWHC 2582 (Ch) (18 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/2582.html Cite as: [2010] STI 2797, [2011] STC 372, [2011] BTC 224, [2010] EWHC 2582 (Ch) |
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CH/2010/APP/0176 |
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 |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Lansdowne Partners Limited Partnership |
Respondent |
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Conrad McDonnell (instructed by PriceWaterhouseCoopers) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 7th and 8th of October 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lewison:
Introduction
"Without prejudice to the above the Manager and the Investment Manager may from time to time and at their sole discretion and out of their own resources decide to rebate to some or all Shareholders … part or all of the Management Fee and/or Performance Fees in respect of the A Class Shares or the B Class Shares. Any such rebates may be applied in paying up additional Shares to be issued to the Shareholder. The Investment Manager may at its discretion rebate its share of the Performance Fee attributable to Shares issued to it or its partners, employees or related entities."
The case stated
i) It is the strong norm in the industry for the investment manager principals or partners to make substantial investments of their personal monies in the funds to which their fund provides investment management services (Ms Nutton's witness statement § 3; Case §10.2.2);ii) Investment by partners is not compulsory (§ 7A.8); and there is no formal requirement about how much partners should invest (§ 7B.7);
iii) Ms Nutton did not invest her own money immediately on becoming a partner but did so later on (§ 7A.3). Mr Tai made his first personal investment six to nine months after becoming a partner (§ 7B.2);
iv) Investments by partners were partly for creating confidence in clients; partly for financial gain, and partly for convenience. Partner investment gives a strong message to clients and makes investment managers risk averse (§ 7A.10). There were advantages to partners in investing in the funds under management by the partnership. It avoided having to contact brokers and keep a separate check on personal investments; avoided conflicts of interest, and simplified the obtaining of consents needed for regulatory purposes (§ 7B.6);
v) In so far as the individual limited partners manage investments, they do so as employees of the general partner under contracts of employment (§ 7B.12);
vi) Investment manager principals who invest in the funds under management do not pay performance fees or management fees on their investments. Either they have zero fee shares, or the fees are rebated to them (§ 7A.14);
vii) Rebates to partners are discretionary (§ 7B.8). However, it was inevitable that at the end of the year rebates would be paid, and so the partnership's accounts record this. The partnership receives management fees monthly. It makes accruals for rebates in the accounts on a monthly basis. Performance fees are only shown in the accounts when they are received in cash after the fund year, which is typically 10 days after 31 December in each year. Rebates of performance fees are typically paid within ten days. (§ 7B.4);
viii) Rebates are also given to members of partners' families and their trusts such as pension schemes. The thinking behind this is that if a partner puts money into a pension scheme he looks on it as his own money (§ 7B.11)
ix) Fees are rebated to outside investors, but this will always be covered by a written agreement. Rebates made under such an agreement are not discretionary (§ 7A.17), but are contractual (§ 7B.8). Some investors positively demand rebates (§ 7B.8). In the case of rebates to outside investors the level of rebate is lower, amounting to between a third and a quarter of the fees (§ 7A.17);
x) Performance and management fees received by International come directly from the funds that it manages (§ 7A.20). There is no contractual relationship between the funds and the partners (§ 7A.19); although there is a contractual relationship (in the shape of the prospectus) between investors (including partners who invest) and the funds (§ 6.10);
xi) The partnership receives from International 90 per cent of the management fee and 100 per cent of the performance fee (Mr Tai's witness statement § 35). However, the fees rebated to the partners amounts to 100 per cent of both fees (Mr Tai's witness statement § 47);
xii) As from the beginning of 2008 partners no longer paid fees and received rebates. Instead they subscribed for zero fee shares (Ms Nutton's witness statement §§ 8, 9); and their existing holdings were converted into zero fee shares (Ms Nutton's witness statement § 20).
Mutual trading
"It is true to say that a person cannot make a profit out of himself if what is meant is that he may provide himself with something at a less cost than that at which he could buy it, or if he does something for himself instead of employing some one to do it. He saves money in those circumstances, but he does not make a profit. But a company can make a profit out of its members as customers, although its range of customers is limited to its shareholders. If a railway company makes a profit by carrying its shareholders, or if any other trading company, by trading with its shareholders even if it is limited to trading with them, makes a profit, that profit belongs to the shareholders in a sense, but it belongs to them qua shareholders. It does not come back to them as purchasers or customers; it comes back to them as shareholders upon their shares. Where all that a company does is to collect money from a certain number of people - it matters not whether they are called members of the company or participating policy holders - and apply it for the benefit of those same people, not as shareholders in the company, but as the people who subscribed it, then … there is no profit. If the people were to do the thing for themselves there would be no profit, and the fact that they incorporate a legal entity to do it for them makes no difference; there is still no profit. This is not because the entity of the company is to be disregarded; it is because there is no profit, the money being simply collected from those people and handed back to them, not in the character of shareholders, but in the character of those who have paid it."
"In this case … there are no shareholders interested, and the whole of the yearly surplus remains to the credit of the members, and must either be applied to meeting their future claims or be returned to them on retirement. Sooner or later, in meal or in malt, the whole of the company's receipts must go back to the policy holders as a class, though not precisely in the proportions in which they have contributed to them; and the association does not in any true sense make a profit out of their contributions."
"The expression "the mutuality principle" has been devised to express the basis for exemption of these groups from taxation. It is a convenient expression, but the situations it covers are not in all respects alike. In some cases the essence of the matter is that the group of persons in question is not in any sense trading, so the starting point for an assessment for income tax in respect of trading profits does not exist. In other cases, there may be in some sense a trading activity, but the objective, or the outcome, is not profits, it is merely to cover expenditure and to return any surplus, directly or indirectly, sooner or later, to the members of the group. These two criteria often, perhaps generally, overlap; since one of the criteria of a trade is the intention to make profits, and a surplus comes to be called a profit if it derives from a trade. So the issue is better framed as one question, rather than two: is the activity, on the one hand, a trade, or an adventure in the nature of trade, producing a profit, or is it, on the other, a mutual arrangement which, at most, gives rise to a surplus?"
"10.1.2 The nature of the activities of [the partnership] does not fit into any of the categories of the cases presented to us which succeeded in showing elements of mutual trading. In particular [the partnership] trades for a profit and on our reading of the cases put to us we would have had to find that it had been set up (or at least a part would have had to be set up) with the intention of providing some non-profit benefit to a class of people. We were unable so to find.
10.1.3 Other factors which we believe show that this was not mutual trading are that SH [one of the partners] and the other partners received rebates as partners whereas the fees were paid on their behalf as investors and [the partnership] rebates 100% management and performance fees but only receives 90% management fee from [International]."
Deductible expense
"Subject to the provisions of the Tax Acts, in computing the amount of the profits to be charged under Case I or Case II of Schedule D, no sum shall be deducted in respect of—
(a) any disbursements or expenses, not being money wholly and exclusively laid out or expended for the purposes of the trade, profession or vocation"
i) A partner, unlike an employee, is a co-owner of all the assets of the firm. Every receipt must therefore be brought into account in computing his share of the profits or assets. Equally any expenditure which he incurs out of his own pocket on behalf of the partnership in the proper performance of his duties as a partner will be brought into account against his co-partners in that computation (p. 249);ii) For the purposes of taxation a partnership is not an entity separate from the partners (p. 253);
iii) The mechanics of payment are not relevant. The same tax consequences will apply whether the expenditure is met by the partner drawing directly on the partnership bank account or by spending his own money and then seeking reimbursement (p. 254);
iv) Consequently when considering the purpose for which money is paid it is the purpose of the original outlay by the partner, rather than the purpose of the reimbursement, that is the relevant purpose (p. 254);
v) What a partner receives out of partnership funds must be brought into account except in so far he can demonstrate that it represents a payment to him in reimbursement of sums expended by him on partnership purposes in the carrying on of the partnership business or practice (p. 255);
vi) It is only in the latter case that it will be deductible for tax purposes.
i) The question is whether the expenditure is made to serve the purposes of the trade (p. 870);ii) The effect of the word "exclusively" is to preclude a deduction if it appears that the expenditure was not only to serve the purposes of the trade, profession or vocation of the taxpayer but also to serve some other purposes. Such other purposes, if found to exist, will usually be the private purposes of the taxpayer (p. 870);
iii) To ascertain whether the money was expended to serve the purposes of the taxpayer's business it is necessary to discover the taxpayer's "object" in making the expenditure (p. 870). The taxpayer's "object" in making expenditure is not limited to his conscious motive (p. 875);
iv) The object of the taxpayer in making the expenditure must be distinguished from the effect of the expenditure. An expenditure may be made exclusively to serve the purposes of the business, but it may have a private advantage (p. 870);
v) If it appears that the object of the taxpayer at the time of the expenditure was to serve two purposes, the purposes of his business and other purposes, the expenditure will not be deductible even if the business purposes are the predominant purposes intended to be served (p. 870).
"For example a medical consultant has a friend in the South of France who is also his patient. He flies to the South of France for a week, staying in the home of his friend and attending professionally on him. He seeks to recover the cost of his air fare. The question of fact will be whether the journey was undertaken solely to serve the purposes of the medical practice. This will be judged in the light of the taxpayer's object in making the journey. The question will be answered by considering whether the stay in the South of France was a reason, however subordinate, for undertaking the journey, or was not a reason but only the effect. If a week's stay on the Riviera was not an object of the consultant, if the consultant's only object was to attend on his patient, his stay on the Riviera was an unavoidable effect of the expenditure on the journey and the expenditure lies outside the prohibition in s 130."
"If Lord Brightman's consultant had said that he had given no thought at all to the pleasures of sitting on the terrace with his friend and a bottle of Côtes de Provence, his evidence might well not have been credited. But that would not be inconsistent with a finding that the only object of the journey was to attend upon his patient and that personal pleasures, however welcome, were only the effects of a journey made for an exclusively professional purpose."
"We consider that Mallalieu and Arthur Young are distinguishable as the non deductible items in those cases relate to a claim for tax allowances on personal expenses or reimbursement of personal expenses for employees. Here the fee rebates are of the same nature as those to non partners which were accepted by HMRC as deductible expenses of the business. Does it matter than there was no express contract by which the fees were rebated to partners? From the evidence put forward on behalf of [the partnership], especially that of Suzanne Nutton we accept that fee rebates were the strong norm in the business and partners expected fee rebates. Furthermore we believe that if the fee rebates had not been given it would have been a significant sign that partners were not valued (especially but not merely if given to some but not others) and there was a significant danger that non rebated partners would have left. As such the rebates were part of partner care and we find that they were paid wholly and exclusively for the purposes of a trade."
Discovery assessment
i) The partnership had not sought to hide the fact that rebates were paid to partners. This had been disclosed to an experienced officer during an enquiry in 2000 and also by letter dated 30 March 2006 giving full details of the partners and their NI numbers to an officer who had undertaken to pass on the knowledge of the relevant tax offices (§ 10.3.2);ii) From about 14 August 2006 Mr Ryan, the officer responsible for the general partner in the partnership, knew that some partners were in receipt of rebates (§ 10.3.3);
iii) It was not necessary that a disclosure must declare an insufficiency of assessment to HMRC. All that was necessary was that information is given to HMRC which would enable a decision to be made by HMRC whether to raise an additional tax assessment (§ 10.3.4).
"There is provision for rebate of both the management and performance fees. In particular [the partnership] will rebate out of its own resources all the performance fees received by it and relating to shares issued to it, its partners or related entities. [The partnership] will also rebate part of the management fee attributable to shares subscribed for in the IPO as long as held by the original subscriber. These rebates may be applied in paying up additional shares to the shareholder.
Please provide an analysis of the rebates of £90,362 and £239,361 shown in the partnership accounts, indicating the name of the investor, whether and how connected with [the general partner] and/or [the partnership], the amount rebated and what amount, if any, was used to pay up additional shares."
"We enclose a schedule detailing the performance and management fee rebates that have been paid and accrued for the period ended 31 March 1999. Of the investors, the only parties to be connected with Lansdowne were [names were given]."
"Directors/Partners invest their own money in the funds which they are responsible for managing.
As with all investors they are charged a management fee which is paid to a separate entity which is a partnership formed by the directors and senior managers of [the general partner].
The directors and other partners then claim a refund from [the partnership] in respect of the portion of the overall management fee which relates to their own investments.
Mr Tai believes the individuals return this income on their own Tax Returns but was unsure whether a liability in the true sense arises and used an analogy of a plumber fixing his own bathroom and not charging himself for the labour.
[Mr Gregory] advised Mr Tai whilst this transaction is outside the review of the [general partner] he would need to consult and pass the information on to each individual's tax office for their consideration and [Mr Gregory] will ask for a full list of partners and their National Insurance numbers in follow-up."
"… if you have any observations to make with regards to these notes please would you make me aware of those observations in your reply to this letter."
"My understanding from our meeting was that the rebates of fees in respect of the partners was paid back to the [partnership] and was not paid back through [the general partner]. Understanding this to be the case, I would request details of the names and addresses of each of the partners along with their National Insurance numbers so that I may notify the partners' individual tax offices of the fee rebate arrangements. It will then be up to the partners' own tax offices to make further enquiries with regards to this item should they wish to do so."
"Fee rebates:
As requested please find attached:
…
- name, address and N.I. No of each partner for tax years 2004-5 and 2005-6."
"(1) Where an officer of the Board or the Board discover, as regards a partnership statement made by any person (the representative partner) in respect of any period—
(a) that any profits which ought to have been included in the statement have not been so included, or
(b) that an amount of profits so included is or has become insufficient, or
(c) that any relief or allowance claimed by the representative partner is or has become excessive,
the officer or, as the case may be, the Board may, subject to subsections (3) and (4) below, by notice to that partner so amend the partnership return as to make good the omission or deficiency or eliminate the excess.
…
(4) No amendment shall be made under subsection (1) above unless one of the two conditions mentioned below is fulfilled.
…
(6) The second condition is that at the time when an officer of the Board—
(a) ceased to be entitled to give notice of his intention to enquire into the representative partner's partnership return; or
(b) informed that partner that he had completed his enquiries into that return,
the officer could not have been reasonably expected, on the basis of the information made available to him before that time, to be aware of the situation mentioned in subsection (1) above.
(7) Subsections (6) and (7) of section 29 of this Act apply for the purposes of subsection (6) above as they apply for the purposes of subsection (5) of that section; and those subsections as so applied shall have effect as if—
(a) any reference to the taxpayer were a reference to the representative partner;
(b) any reference to the taxpayer's return under section 8 or 8A were a reference to the representative partner's partnership return; and
(c) sub-paragraph (ii) of paragraph (a) of subsection (7) were omitted."
"(6) For the purposes of subsection (5) above, information is made available to an officer of the Board if—
(a) it is contained in [the representative partner's partnership return] in respect of the relevant year of assessment (the return), or in any accounts, statements or documents accompanying the return;
(b) it is contained in any claim made as regards the relevant year of assessment by [the representative partner] acting in the same capacity as that in which he made the return, or in any accounts, statements or documents accompanying any such claim;
(c) it is contained in any documents, accounts or particulars which, for the purposes of any enquiries into the return or any such claim by an officer of the Board, are produced or furnished by [the representative partner] to the officer. . .; or
(d) it is information the existence of which, and the relevance of which as regards the situation mentioned in subsection (1) above—
(i) could reasonably be expected to be inferred by an officer of the Board from information falling within paragraphs (a) to (c) above; or
(ii) are notified in writing by [the representative partner] to an officer of the Board.
(7) In subsection (6) above—
(a) any reference to [the representative partner's partnership return] in respect of the relevant year of assessment includes—
(i) a reference to any return of his under that section for either of the two immediately preceding years of assessment; and
(ii) …; and
(b) any reference in paragraphs (b) to (d) to [the representative partner] includes a reference to a person acting on his behalf."
"I can see no reason for saying that a discovery of undercharge can only arise where a new fact has been discovered. The words are apt to include any case in which for any reason it newly appears that the taxpayer has been undercharged and the context supports rather than detracts from this interpretation."
"Mr. Shelbourne said that "discovery" means finding out something new about the facts. It does not mean a change of mind about the law. He said that everyone is presumed to know the law, even an inspector of taxes. I am afraid I cannot agree with Mr. Shelbourne about this. It is a mistake to say that everyone is presumed to know the law. The true proposition is that no one is to be excused from doing his duty by pleading that he did not know the law. Every lawyer who, in his researches in the books, finds out that he was mistaken about the law, makes a discovery. So also does an inspector of taxes."
i) "Awareness" is the officer's awareness of an actual insufficiency in the self-assessment in question, rather than an awareness that he should do something to check whether there is an insufficiency (§ 33);ii) The test whether an officer could reasonably have been expected to be aware of an actual insufficiency is an objective test (§ 33);
iii) The sources of information referred to in section 29 (6) are the only sources of information to be taken into account in deciding whether an officer ought reasonably to have been aware of the actual insufficiency (§§ 36, 51);
iv) The information in question must clearly alert the officer to the insufficiency of the assessment (§ 36).
i) The statutory reference is to "an officer" of the Board, not to any particular officer;ii) This entails a hypothetical officer rather than any real individual;
iii) The hypothetical officer must be endowed with knowledge of elementary arithmetic, some knowledge of tax law, and some tax law, all of which he will apply to the prescribed sources of information.
i) on 31 January 2007ii) on the basis of the information notified to him in writing by or on behalf of the representative partner before 31 January 2007
iii) to be aware of an insufficiency in the partnership return for the year of assessment 2004/2005.
"The maxim is "Qui tacet consentire": the maxim of the law is "Silence gives consent". If therefore you wish to construe what my silence betokened, you must construe that I consented, not that I denied."
Result