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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Palmer v. Revenue And Customs [2006] ScotCS CSIH_8 (16 February 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSIH_8.html
Cite as: 77 TC 738, [2006] ScotCS CSIH_8, 2006 GWD 6-117, 2006 SLT 259, [2006] CSIH 8, 2006 SC 464, [2007] BTC 126, [2006] STI 580

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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Abernethy

Lord Johnston

Lord Penrose

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2006] CSIH 8

XA39/05

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD PENROSE

 

in

 

APPEAL

 

by

 

BEN R. PALMER

Appellant;

 

against

 

THE COMMISSIONERS OF HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS

Respondents:

 

_______

 

 

 

Act: Party (Appellant)

Alt: Paterson, Solicitor for Revenue & Customs (Respondents)

 

16 February 2006

 

[1] The taxpayer Mr Palmer, worked offshore on a number of vessels in the year of assessment 1998-1999 and 2000-2001. In the earlier of those years he worked on board an Earl and Wright Sedco 700 semi-submersible vessel. In 2000 - 2001 he worked on board the Pride Africa. He was at all material times resident and ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom. He claimed relief from income tax under section 192 A of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988, as amended by Finance Act 1998 in respect of periods beginning on or after 17 March 1998. That section provides for relief by deduction from assessable income of a proportion of a seafarer's Schedule E income where the duties of the employment are performed wholly or partly outside the United Kingdom. The sole issue is whether Mr Parker's service on the two particular vessels qualified for relief. The respondents refused relief. Mr Palmer appealed to the General Commissioners. They in turn refused his appeal in respect of each of the years in question.

[2] Section 192 A provides definitions in these terms:

"(2) In subsection (1) employment "as a seafarer" means an employment consisting of the performance of duties on a ship (or of such duties and others incidental to them).

(3) For the purposes of this section a "ship" does not include:

(a) any offshore installation within the meaning of the Mineral

Workings (Offshore Installations) Act 1971, or

(b) what would be such an installation if the references in that Act

to controlled waters were to any waters."

[3] Each of the vessels on which Mr Palmer served would qualify as 'ships' for some purposes. The Pride Africa would be a ship in ordinary language. It is a self-propelled monohull vessel constructed for use as a drilling vessel. The Sedco semi-submersible is less obviously a 'ship' in the common usage of that term. But it was not in dispute between parties that each vessel could in general terms be described as a ship. The dispute focused on the words of exclusion in sub-section (3).

[4] The incorporation of the provisions of the Mineral Workings (Offshore Installations) Act 1971 as the measure of the installations excluded from the meaning of the term "ship" has proved to be singularly inappropriate. Amendment of the primary legislation in the changing environment of the offshore extraction industry resulted in a provision of some complexity when applied for taxation purposes. Schedule 27 to the Finance Act 2004 recognised that, and enacted a definition particularly adapted to the requirements of the Taxes Acts. This appeal has to be dealt with on the terms of the 1971 Act as amended at the material time.

[5] It was decided in the joined cases of Perks v Clark, Perks v Macleod and Newrick & Granger v Guild [2001] STC 1254 that jack-up rigs were ships for the purposes of the foreign earnings deduction, and that the earnings from employment on such vessels were 'emoluments from employment as a seafarer' for the purpose of paragraph 3(2A) of Schedule 12 to the Taxes Act 1988, the predecessor of section 192 A. The court considered that in most cases, the categorization of a structure should be governed by its design and capability rather than by its actual use at any time. That view had been reflected in practice since at least 1998.

[6] The 1971 Act was extensively amended by the Oil and Gas (Enterprise) Act 1982 and by the Offshore Installations and Pipeline Works (Management and Administration) Regulations 1995. Section 24 of the 1982 Act substituted a new definition of the scope of the principal Act. Among other amendments, the 1995 Regulations introduced new definitions of 'relevant waters' and 'controlled waters', in identical terms, into the definition of the scope of the 1971 Act. In general terms, these restricted the scope of that Act to the territorial waters of Great Britain. Sub-section (3) (b) of Section 192 A then excluded these terms by requiring the amended 1971 Act provisions to be read as if they applied to any waters, without territorial restriction.

[7] The cumulative effect of these amendments on section 192 A (3) was helpfully summarised by Miss Paterson, counsel for the respondents. So far as material, section 192 A (3), reflecting the amendments of the 1971 Act, had to be expanded to read:

"For the purposes of this section a 'ship' does not include -

Any structure which is, or is to be, or has been used, while standing or stationed in any waters or on the foreshore or other land intermittently covered by water (a) for the exploitation, or exploration with a view to exploitation, of mineral resources by means of a well; (b) for the storage of gas in or under the shore or bed of any waters or the recovery of gas so stored; (c) for the conveyance of things by means of a pipe; or (d) mainly for the provision of accommodation for persons who work on or from a structure falling within any of the provisions of this paragraph and which is not an excepted structure".

[8] Mr Palmer argued that the amendments of the 1971 Act were inept, and produced a meaningless reference for the purposes of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act because they failed to provide a definition of the term 'controlled waters' as that expression was used in section 192 A (3) (b). But his analysis was flawed. He had failed to take account of the terms of Part II of Schedule 1 to the 1995 Regulations where the term was defined for the purposes of the 1971 Act. That he should have erred in this way is not difficult to understand. The processes of amendment and adaptation of the 1971 Act provisions were tortuous in the extreme. But we are satisfied that Miss Paterson's analysis is accurate, and that the expanded version of the provision set out in paragraph [7] provides the appropriate test for present purposes. Of the four paragraphs categorizing structures according to design and capacity, only (a) is material for the purposes of this case.

[9] In order to deal with Mr Palmer's submissions, it is necessary to discuss some of the terms of the 1971 Act in the context of their application for Schedule E purposes. Section 192 A, as set out in paragraph [2] above, excluded "offshore installations" from the definition of "ship". Mr Palmer argued that neither of the vessels on which he served was an "offshore installation". He submitted that they were not installations at all. Typically, an installation in the off-shore industry was an assembly of components put together on location after being transported by sea. He referred to forms of steel and concrete structures that required to be towed to site, sunk, fixed to the seabed by one means of another, and then fitted out on top with a variety of modules suitable for the function for which the installation was designed. Further, he submitted that paragraph (a) applied only where the installation had been, was or was intended to be, used for exploitation, or for both exploration and exploitation of mineral resources by means of a well. That is, exploitation was an essential element of the purpose to be served by an excluded structure. He submitted that the findings in this case did not support the inference drawn by the General Commissioners that the two vessels were excluded.

[10] As amended by the 1982 Act and the 1995 Regulations, section 1 of the 1971 Act applied inter alia to "installations" which were maintained in controlled waters and which were not permanently connected by access structures to the dry land. The term "offshore installation" was defined by section 1 (4) of the 1971 Act, as amended by the 1982 Act, as meaning any installation which is or has been maintained or is intended to be established for the carrying on of any activity to which the Act applied. In terms of section 1(2) these activities included exploitation or exploration of mineral resources in or under the bed of controlled waters. "Installation" was defined by section 1 (5) as including, inter alia, "any floating structure or device maintained on a station by whatever means".

[11] Article 3 of the 1995 Regulations substituted a new definition of "offshore installation". The original section 1 of the 1971 Act was repealed as a whole by Part I of schedule 1 to the 1995 Regulations. Article 3 (1) of the 1995 Regulations provided:

" ... in these Regulations the expression 'offshore installation' means a structure which is, or is to be, or has been used, while standing or stationed in relevant waters ... "

for a specified purpose. Article 2 defines a number of terms and expressions. It distinguishes fixed and mobile installations. With the exception of floating production platforms, which are treated as fixed installations whatever their other characteristics, mobile installations are identified as those that can be moved from place to place without major dismantling or modification, whether or not they have their own motive power.

[12] As a matter of general usage, it is beyond argument that the vessels in question are "structures". The definition of 'structure' found in Hobday v Nicol [1944] 1 All ER 302 and referred to in the case, as anything which is constructed, involving the notion of something which is put together, consisting of a number of different things which are so put together or built together or constructed as to make one whole, is consistent with ordinary usage. It is enough to note that major relevant components of the Sedco are its pontoons, caissons, deck and the drilling rig mounted on top. In the case of the Pride Africa, they are the hull and the drilling rig. But it is equally clear that vessels generally are treated as structures in terms of the Regulations. Regulation 2 defines "vessel" as including "any floating structure which is capable of being staffed". In that way, it excludes buoys and other unmanned structures. But it leaves little doubt that, within the terms of the Regulations, a ship is a structure. The expression "associated structure" is defined as including a vessel.

[13] Mr Palmer's argument that the vessels were not structures because they floated complete on the sea from launch and throughout their working lives, and were not assembled or erected on location cannot be sustained. While there are many structures of that nature, the examples cannot define exhaustively the scope of the Regulations. There was no issue between the parties whether the vessels were used "while standing or stationed" in relevant waters. The Sedco specification which is incorporated into the case shows that it was moored on station. The Pride Africa was held on station by dynamic positioning.

[14] It was Mr Palmer's submission before the General Commissioners that the purpose of the vessels was exploration for mineral resources. He contended, however, that the vessels were not carrying out exploration work with a view to exploitation. Neither vessel would ever be involved in drilling a production well. Before the court that argument depended on the submission that the expression "exploitation, or exploration with a view to exploitation" identified classes of use that must, in the case of any structure, involve past, current or future use that includes exploitation of mineral resources. In our view that is not a tenable construction of the regulation. In the case of exploration, subsequent exploitation is clearly a requirement. Academic research carried out to increase knowledge of the nature and extent of sub-sea mineral deposits might have as its object the prohibition of exploitation by others. What is envisaged here is exploration in anticipation that workable deposits will be exploited after discovery. But there is no discernible requirement within these regulations that the same installation should be involved in the successive stages. We reject Mr Palmer's submissions on this issue.

[15] Against this background, the narrow question for the court is whether the General Commissioners were entitled to hold in fact, as they did in paragraph 5 of their findings, that the two vessels were offshore installations used for the purpose of exploitation or exploration with a view to exploitation of mineral resources by means of a well. In our view their decision on that question was one that they were fully entitled to reach on the evidence before them.

[16] Mr Palmer repeated before the court the arguments he had advanced before the General Commissioners that the vessels were ships for other statutory and regulatory purposes. He pointed out that neither vessel was registered as an oil or gas floating installation by the Department of Trade and Industry. He argued that the Offshore Installations (Safety Case) Regulations 1992 had not applied to either vessel, and indeed that the time limits for notification of movements under those regulations would be incompatible with the requirements actually applicable to vessels such as the two in question. It is undoubtedly the case that different regulations classify structures in different ways according to their purpose, and on occasion depending on the department of government sponsoring their promulgation. But the regulatory point of reference in this case is clear and specific and nothing can turn on the possible application of provisions that have not been incorporated for tax purposes.

[17] We therefore answer Questions 1 and 2(a) in the affirmative and find it unnecessary to answer Question 2(b).

 


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