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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Magistrates of Portobello v. Surveyor of Taxes [1890] ScotLR 27_863 (10 July 1890)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1890/27SLR0863.html
Cite as: [1890] SLR 27_863, [1890] ScotLR 27_863

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 863

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

[Court of Exchequer.

Thursday, July 10. 1890.

27 SLR 863

Magistrates of Portobello

v.

Surveyor of Taxes.

Subject_1Revenue
Subject_2Income-Tax
Subject_3Cemetery
Subject_4Income-Tax Act 1842 (5 and 6 Vict. cap. 35), sec. 60, Schedule A, No. 3, Rule 3.
Facts:

Held that where the magistrates and town council of a burgh in fulfilling their duty to provide a burial ground for the burgh have been obliged to borrow money, they are not entitled to deduct from the profits derived from the cemetery before being assessed in income-tax the amount of the interest due on the borrowed money, but are liable to be assessed on such profits after deduction only of working expenses under Schedule A, No. 3, rule 3, of the Income-Tax Act 1842.

Headnote:

At a meeting of the Commissioners for the

Page: 864

General Purposes of the Income-Tax Acts for the county of Edinburgh, held at Edinburgh on 31st March 1890, Mr Robert P. Stevenson, Town-Clerk of the burgh of Portobello, appealed against an assessment made upon the Magistrates and Council of the burgh of Portobello, as “the Parochial Board of the Statutory Parish of Portobello, under the Burial Grounds (Scotland) Act 1855,” under the Income-Tax Acts, on the sum of £185, being excess of income over expenditure, as shown in their cemetery account, and brought out as follows:—

Burial Stances and Lairs sold

£253

0

0

Interment dues received

96

10

0

Sums received for borders, monuments, and plants

52

12

6

Total Receipts,

£402

2

6

Less, Salaries and fees

£85

0

0

Labourer's wages

86

6

0

Taxes, insurance, &c.

45

14

0

217

0

0

£185

2

6

The Commissioners refused the appeal and confirmed the assessment, and at the appellants' request the present case was stated for the opinion of the Court of Exchequer. The case stated—The Portobello Cemetery was provided by the appellants under the Burial Grounds Act of 1855 in the year 1877 in consequence of the Parish Burial Ground at Duddingston Church and the burial ground at the quoad sacra Parish Church of Portobello being fully used and closed against the public.

In order to implement the obligation imposed on them by the said Burial Grounds (Scotland) Act to provide a public burial ground for the burgh of Portobello, one-half of which should be free ground for the parishioners, the appellants purchased from the Benhar Coal Company a piece of ground measuring three and a-half acres or thereby, at the price of £2977 (with a nominal feu-duty), which was enclosed and laid out as a burial ground or cemetery at a cost of £3772.

The appellants having no means of making these outlays except by assessing the ratepayers and mortgaging the assessment, borrowed from the Standard Insurance Company, on the security of the rate, the sums of £6300 and £450.

The assessing and borrowing powers are contained in the 26th and 27th sections of the said Act, which provide that the expenses incurred by the parochial board in carrying the Act into execution, in so far as the sums received for exclusive right of burial, or as fees or other payments in respect of interments shall be insufficient, shall be raised by assessment to be levied in the same way as the rate for relief of the poor; and that it shall be lawful for the parochial board to borrow any money required for providing and laying out any burial ground under the Act, and to charge the future assessments under the Act with the payment of such money, and the interest thereon, provided that there shall be paid in every year in addition to the interest of the money borrowed and unpaid, not less than one-twentieth of the principal sum borrowed, until the whole is discharged.

The appellants have assessed the ratepayers every year since 1877 to provide for the amount of the annual deficiency, the rate being for six years 4d. per £, for four years 3 1 2d. per £, for two years 2 1 2d. per £. The balance of the debt is now £2768.

The appellants contended that their case is distinguishable from the cases of The Paddington Burial Board and The Edinburgh Southern Cemetery Company on the following grounds —(1) In the Paddington case the money required for the purchase of the ground was borrowed from the Public Works Loan Commissioners and was repaid, and there was no income-tax imposed until after the loan had been repaid, and then it was held by the Court that the cemetery was carried on for the benefit of the ratepayers. But in the present case that stage has not yet been arrived at, and the appellants conceive that so long as there is a necessity to tax the ratepayers, the decision in the Paddington case does not apply. (2) In The Edinburgh Southern Cemetery case the Court dealt with a commercial company trading in the lairs for profit to the shareholders; but in the present case the appellants are acting without regard to profit under compulsion of an Act of Parliament, which requires them to provide a public burial ground and to assess the ratepayers for that purpose, and until they attain the position of not requiring to assess it cannot be maintained that there is any pecuniary benefit. When the time comes that the ratepayers are relieved from taxation it may be better contended by the assessor that the Paddington case should apply.

The Surveyor of Taxes, Mr Philip Sulley, maintained in support of the assessment that the Corporation of Portobello carry on an actual business as proprietors of the cemetery, and that the result of their trading for the year to Whitsunday 1889 was an excess of income over all expenditure of £185, 2s. 6d., and that the assessment was rightly made on this amount, in addition to the assessment separately made upon the interest paid out of the rate. He referred to the case of The Mersey Docks and Harbour Board v. Lucas, No. 64 Tax Cases, as showing that surplus income was assessable as profit, without reference to the manner in which such surplus income was applied. Further, that the distinction sought to be established between the present case and that of The Paddington Burial Board v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue, No. 66 Tax Cases, and 15 Q. B. D. 9, was not real or effective. In that case the profit earned by the burial board was applied to the relief of the poor rates; here to the relief of the actual cemetery rate, which must be levied at a considerably higher rate were it not for the profit earned in the working of the cemetery.

The Commissioners were of opinion that the appeal fell to be decided in conformity with the above decisions.

Page: 865

The appellant referred to the following additional authorities at the discussion— Glasgow Corporation Water Commissioners v. Solicitor of Inland Revenue, May 26, 1875, 2 R. 708; Glasgow Corporation Water Commissioners v. Miller, January 22, 1886, 3 R. 489; Edinburgh Southern Cemetery Company v. Surveyor of Taxes, November 29, 1889, 17 R. 154; Attorney-General v. Black, January 26, 1871, 6 Exch. 78 and 308.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord President—I think this case a very clear one. The profit is distinctly shown in the case to amount to £402 in all. It arises from moneys paid for burial stances and lairs sold; that is the first item, and that is a source of profit which is just in the same position as the profit in the case of the Edinburgh Southern Cemetery. And so also the interment dues—the second branch—that is also a source of profit which occurred in that case. The third item is for borders, monuments, plants. Now, the profit is earned by certain work performed by the Burial Board or its officers, and of course they are quite entitled to deduct from the amount of profits the expense of earning them, or what may be called the working expenses, which consist of salaries and fees, labour and wages, taxes, insurance, and the like. It is proposed also by the appellants that there should be deducted from the amount of profits the interest upon money borrowed. Now, I think that is founded upon an entire mistake, because if the interest upon borrowed money was to be deducted from the amount of the profits before ascertaining the assessable profits for income-tax, that would be to allow the Burial Board in paying the interest upon its debt to deduct the income-tax from that interest in a question with the creditor, and not to account for it to the Crown. That is a thing that of course nobody is entitled to do, but the proposal made on the part of the appellant would amount practically to that result, and therefore it is quite plain that, even apart from the express words of the statute, that interest cannot possibly form a proper deduction in estimating the assessable profit. That being so, it is really unnecessary to go further into the case, because the whole matter is settled by authority. Taking the Mersey Dock case, the Paddington case, and the Edinburgh Southern Cemetery case, I think it is quite impossible to escape from the conclusion that the whole of this profit is assessable under Schedule A, No. 3, rule 3. And therefore I am for refusing the appeal.

Lord Shand and Lord M'Laren concurred.

Lord Adam was absent.

The Court affirmed the determination of the Commissioners.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Appellants— Lorimer. Agent— R. P. Stevenson, S.S.C.

Counsel for Surveyor of Taxes— Young. Agent—The Solicitor of Inland Revenue.

1890


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