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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Angus Braidwood & Sons Ltd v. Revenue And Customs [2007] ScotCS CSIH_63 (26 July 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSIH_63.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotCS CSIH_63, [2007] CSIH 63

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FIRST DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord President

Lord Eassie

Lord Brodie

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] CSIH 63

XA113/06

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by THE LORD PRESIDENT

 

in

 

APPEAL

 

under section 11 of the Tribunals and Inquiries Act 1992

 

by

 

ANGUS BRAIDWOOD & SONS LIMITED

Appellant;

 

against

 

COMMISSIONERS OF H.M. REVENUE AND CUSTOMS

Respondents:

 

_______

 

 

 

Act: A Young; Lindsays, W.S.

Alt: Artis; Shepherd & Wedderburn, LLP

 

26 July 2007

 

The circumstances

[1] The appellant company carries on business as a scrap metal merchant and processor. As part of that processing it crushes scrap metal into bales on various sites by means of wheeled baling machines. The appellant operates ten such machines. There are ten others in the United Kingdom. Each machine (a Compactor AL5000 of Italian manufacture) is a single unit comprising a crane for lifting scrap (cars or other metal waste) and a baler which crushes the scrap into bales. As illustrated in the literature and photographs produced before the VAT and Duties Tribunal, it has six principal wheels, all situated towards the rear, with retractable supports to front and rear to provide stability when in operation. The machine is moved both between sites and on site by a tractor unit to which it is coupled for that purpose. The appellant has eight such tractor units. The original coupling was by a standard 2 inch "fifth wheel" coupling. In 2001 the coupling arrangement was modified by the appellant, heavy duty 3.5 inch couplings being substituted on each machine and compatible 3.5 inch king-pins being substituted on each tractor unit. Separate fuel tanks supply the engines which power the machines and the tractor units. No issue arises in relation to the duty payable on the fuel which is supplied to the machines. The issue for determination is whether the appellant is entitled to rebate on the excise duty on hydrocarbon oil chargeable on the fuel supplied to the tractor units.

 

The legislation

[2] The Hydrocarbon Oil Duties Act 1979 (as amended) provides:

"11(1) Subject to sections 12 ... below, where heavy oil charged with the excise duty on hydrocarbon oil is delivered for home use, there shall be allowed on the oil at the time of delivery a rebate of duty at [certain rates]".

"12(2) No heavy oil on whose delivery for home use rebate has been allowed ... under section 11 above ... shall -

(a) be used as fuel for a road vehicle; or

(b) be taken into a road vehicle as fuel,

unless an amount equal to the amount for the time being allowable in respect of rebate on like oil has been paid to the Commissioners in accordance with [certain regulations].

(3) For the purposes of this section ... -

(a) heavy oil shall be deemed to be used as fuel for a road vehicle if, but

only if, it is used as fuel for the engine provided for propelling the vehicle or for an engine which draws its fuel from the same supply as that engine; and

(b) heavy oil shall be deemed to be taken into a road vehicle as fuel if, but

only if, it is taken into it as part of that supply."

"27(1) In this Act-

...

'road vehicle' means a vehicle constructed or adapted for use on roads, but does not include any vehicle which is an excepted vehicle within the meaning given by Schedule 1 to this Act."

Schedule 1 to the Act (entitled "Excepted Vehicles") specifies in paragraph 9:

"(1) A mobile crane is an excepted vehicle.

(2) In subparagraph (1) above 'mobile crane' means a vehicle which is designed and constructed as a mobile crane and which -

(a) is used on public roads only as a crane in connection with work carried

on at a site in the immediate vicinity or for the purpose of proceeding to and from a place where it is to be or has been used as a crane; and

(b) when so proceeding does not carry any load except such as is

necessary for its propulsion or equipment."

It is not disputed that the fuel taken into the tractors as fuel is "heavy oil" chargeable to hydrocarbon oil duty and that it is delivered "for home use" (that is, for use in the United Kingdom).

 

The Tribunal's treatment

[3] The Tribunal found that the machine was used as a crane about 50% of the time and as a crane in conjunction with the baler in the remaining 50%. It found that in these circumstances the preponderance of its use was as a crane. That finding is not challenged. The Tribunal also accepted evidence from an engineer who testified for the appellant that the modification to the coupling arrangement -

"did render the tractor unit unsuitable for use with ordinary trailers. In addition the capacity of the tractor unit would not be adequate for use with the heavier type of trailer normally associated with such a coupling and pin. Accordingly the Appellant did render it extremely unlikely that the tractor unit and trailer would ever be separated apart from servicing of the vehicle. However, it would be possible to utilise any of the tractor units with any of the baler units and indeed one tractor unit could substitute for another if, for example, there was a breakdown in the tractor unit, by attending upon and removing the crane and baler to another site where it could operate. However the use of the combined tractor and trailer normally was that they were not separate so that the tractor and trailer could readily be manoeuvred on the site according to the location of scrap."

[4] The Tribunal summarised the appellant's contention before it as follows:

"The trailer and tractor unit were designed and constructed as a mobile crane and that the modifications to the vehicles produced new single units and therefore became one vehicle".

[5] Having noted the argument for the respondents it stated, under the heading "Decision", the following:

"The only issue which remained after hearing the facts for the Tribunal was whether the trailer mounted crane could qualify as a vehicle. 'Vehicle' is not defined in the Act. They came to the view that it could not. The design and construction of the whole apparatus was not simply of a mobile crane it was of an articulated tractor unit attached to a mobile crane. The fuel which would be the subject to rebate was entirely consumed by the tractor unit and accordingly unless it could be regarded as one vehicle with the trailer by virtue of the modification of the king-pin rebate was not permissible.

The fact that a crane can be moved does not make it a 'mobile crane'. The Tribunal considers that it is of the essence of the exemption that the rebated fuel requires to be used by the crane to move itself on a road. Since this is not the case here the appeal must fail, the rebated fuel is not so used.

The appeal is accordingly dismissed ... "

 

The submissions of parties

[6] Mr. Young for the appellant submitted that the Tribunal had completely failed to deal with the main contention advanced by the appellant before it. While noting that contention, it had not discussed the implication for it of its findings - particularly those in relation to the practical consequences of the modification to the coupling arrangement. The configuration of the two parts of the coupling had the effect, for all practical purposes, of there being a single vehicle; that vehicle was a mobile crane. In British Oxygen Co. v Board of Trade [1969] 2 Ch. 174, the Court of Appeal had considered, for the purposes of the Industrial Development Act 1966, three classes of vehicle, the second being of a large articulated tanker assembly very similar in its arrangement to the present tractor and half-trailer. That composite arrangement was held to be a "vehicle". Reference was made in particular to Karminski L.J. at pages 196-7. Although the decision had been appealed to the House of Lords ([1971] AC 610), there was no discussion pertinent to the present issue there. Reference was also made to DPP v Evans [1988] RTR 409, especially per Parker L.J. at pages 414-5. Moreover, the Tribunal had been wrong to conclude that it was "of the essence of the exemption that the rebated fuel required to be used by the crane to move itself on the road". There was no warrant for supposing that the engine which provided propulsion had to be built in as part of the crane. The provisions of the legislation pointed the other way. Reference was made to Schedule 1, para 9(2)(b); that envisaged that an engine which provided propulsion could be added to the crane as part of its excepted load. Section 13(3)(a) envisaged the possibility that the propelling machine might be otherwise than a fixed part of the vehicle in question. Schedule 9 listed exempt vehicles of very precise types, sometimes by reference to their description, sometimes by reference to the type of work they did. None of the exemptions were defined by reference to such features as the location of the engine or the fuel tank. A mobile crane within the meaning of paragraph 9 was accordingly not one restricted to one which was constructed as self-propelling. If the trailer element was to be treated as otherwise than a "vehicle", serious problems could arise about enforcement - for example, by limiting the plant which might be forfeit to the Commissioners.

[7] Mr. Artis for the respondents pointed to the structure of the legislation. A rebate was allowed for heavy oil, otherwise subject to duty, delivered for home use. An exception to the allowance of a rebate applied in the case of oil supplied as fuel for a road vehicle. There was then an exception to the exception in the case of the "excepted vehicles" specified in Schedule 1. Accordingly, to come within the category of an excepted vehicle under Schedule 1, para 9, it was first necessary that the item in question should be a "road vehicle". It was also necessary to bear in mind that section 12(2) was directed not only against the use of the oil as fuel but also against its being taken into the road vehicle as fuel. The Tribunal had, on its primary findings, been entitled to conclude that the whole apparatus was not a single road vehicle but two items coupled together. Neither item could be regarded as a mobile crane within the meaning of para 9. The Tribunal's conclusion from the primary facts was itself a finding of fact which should not be disturbed. Reference was made to Clark v Perks [2001] STC 1254, especially per Carnwarth J. at paras [24] - [28], where citation from earlier familiar authorities was made. In any event on a sound construction of the primary facts the proper inference was that there was no single road vehicle which was a mobile crane. Even with the modified coupling it was possible to use any trailer unit with any baler unit and with any other trailer which had the heavier duty coupling. A coupling designed and constructed for such generalised use could not fall within the exception. In any event, subsequent modification from the original design of the coupling (which had even wider possible use) could not be taken into account when considering whether the relevant item had been "designed and constructed as a mobile crane". Reference was made to Clifbreakers Limited v Commissioners of Customs and Excise (Excise Duties Case/E00157; 2001 V & DR 20, especially at para 13). The circumstance that the crane/baler machine could be moved (by being drawn by a tractor unit) did not make it a "mobile crane" within the meaning of Schedule 1, para 9. British Oxygen Co. v Board of Trade was decided under different legislation and addressed a different issue. In DPP v Evans the connection was such that the "contraption" as a whole was one vehicle. As to para 9(2)(b), the load there envisaged as being necessary for propulsion was a source of power - such as coal or electrical batteries. The trailer here was not a load used for the propulsion of the tractor unit.

Discussion

[8] Despite Mr. Artis's attempts to support it we do not find the reasoning of the Tribunal to be satisfactory. The critical issue before it (as focused by the appellant's contention as noted) was whether, on the facts found by it, the tractor and the crane/baler were to be regarded, for the purposes of this legislation, as a single unit. The facts relevant to that issue were the modification of the coupling arrangement and the consequences of that for the use (or the restriction in use) of the tractor units, the contention being, in essence, that the modification made it unlikely that the tractor unit would ever be used by the appellant other than in conjunction with the crane/baler. The Tribunal does not refer in its reasoning to these facts nor, while apparently recognising that rebate would be allowable if "[the tractor] could be regarded as one vehicle with the trailer by virtue of the modification to the king-pin", does it explain what it made of them in coming to its decision. The critical issue is not addressed. In these circumstances we are of opinion that this court is free itself to address the primary facts and to reach a view as to whether, on those facts, the appellant is entitled to rebate on the oil used as fuel for the engine situated within each tractor unit.

[9] The resolution of that issue turns, as we have said, upon whether, for the purposes of this legislation, a tractor and a crane/baler should be regarded as a single unit. If they cannot be so regarded, then the fuel here in issue cannot qualify for rebate: the tractor which uses the fuel for propulsion cannot, on any view, be regarded, in isolation, as a mobile crane, while the fuel consumed by the crane/baler cannot be regarded as used for the propulsion of the crane/baler, again regarded in isolation. Mr. Artis in his response submitted that the coupling arrangement as modified could not be brought into account on the ground that the relative vehicle, having been delivered from the manufacturer without such modification, could not be one "designed and constructed" as a mobile crane. It is at least doubtful whether any such argument was presented to the Tribunal. Nor was any notice of it given in the respondents' answers to the appeal to this court. Mr Young protested at the lack of notice and did not make a detailed submission on this aspect. In the absence of full argument we are reluctant to express any concluded view on this submission. In the event it is unnecessary for us to do so. Accordingly, for the purposes of this appeal, we treat the modified coupling arrangement as if it had existed in both tractor and crane/baler from the outset.

[10] It is plain from the Tribunal's findings that all the tractors and crane/balers operated by the appellant were similarly modified - that is, that any of the tractors can be coupled up to any of the crane/balers. No coupling is unique to a particular tractor and crane/baler. The Tribunal found that the "modification did render the tractor unit unsuitable for use with ordinary trailers" - presumably because such trailers would have the standard 2 inch king-pins. The Tribunal also found that "the capacity of the tractor unit would not be adequate for use with the heavier type of trailer normally associated with such a coupling and pin". Although the implications of this finding are not wholly clear, we are prepared to proceed upon the basis that the engine capacity of the tractor is inadequate for the purposes of drawing a fully laden trailer of the kind normally fitted with the heavy duty coupling. It is not wholly clear whether that engine capacity would be inadequate for the purpose of drawing such a trailer if un-laden or only partially laden. However, we proceed on the basis that the tractor is not designed and constructed with engine power adequate to draw such a trailer when in normal use.

[11] The Tribunal also found that

" ... the use of the combined tractor and trailer normally was that they were not separate so that the tractor and trailer could readily be manoeuvred on the site according to the location of scrap".

That, however, is a use which the appellant finds normally convenient to adopt rather than a feature which arises from the design and construction of the tractors and crane/balers themselves. The fact remains that in terms of design and construction any trailer can be used with any crane/baler. Does this interchangeability impact upon the critical question, namely, whether, for the purposes of this legislation, there exist single units, each comprising a tractor and crane/baler combined? In our view, it does. Although it may be that as a matter of practice in the appellant's operations a particular tractor may generally be associated with a particular crane/baler and that at a particular point of time they are working in conjunction, it cannot be said, given the facility for interchange, that in terms of construction and design there is a number of identifiable single combined units of tractor and crane/baler. Quite apart from the interchangeability, the larger number of crane/balers than tractors employed by the appellant tells against such identification. That being so, it cannot be said that there exists in the appellant's fleet a (combined) "vehicle which is designed and constructed as a mobile crane" within the meaning of para 9 of Schedule 1. For these reasons this appeal must, in our view, fail.

[12] Reliance was placed by Mr. Young on DPP v Evans. But there the issue was whether there was a breach of the Motor Vehicles (Construction and Use) Regulations 1978 in relation to excessive weight. One question which arose was whether the "contraption" was, as used, a single entire vehicle or a drawing vehicle and trailer. The nature of the arrangement by which the two parts were connected (which included the crane being supported by the front part and its jib being bolted to the rear part) led to the conclusion that the former description was to be preferred. That conclusion is, in our view, unsurprising but it does not assist in resolving the present issue. In British Oxygen Co. v Board of Trade the issue was whether certain gas transporters were excluded from being "machinery or plant" because they were "vehicles". Excepted from "vehicle" as defined was "a vehicle constructed or adapted for the conveyance of a machine incorporated in or permanently attached to it ... ". It was held that they were non-excepted vehicles. One of those classes was that of articulated tanker. Incidentally, it was accepted in argument that a mobile crane would qualify as "machinery or plant" (see page 196D) - presumably because the mobile crane envisaged was an excepted vehicle. The circumstance that for that purpose it was appropriate to regard the articulated tanker as a single vehicle rather than as two distinct parts does not, in our view, assist in resolving the present issue.

[13] Mr. Young also sought to rely on particular aspects of the surrounding statutory language, but that submission was directed to an observation by the Tribunal which, while possibly ambiguous, is not critical to the necessary analysis. Paragraph 9(2)(b) is designed to exclude from a "mobile crane" any vehicle which, when proceeding on a public road, carries any load otherwise than such as is necessary for its propulsion or equipment - that is, a load which is necessarily incidental to such propulsion or equipment; the (remote) possibility that a source of propulsion might be a "load" does not assist in determining whether the tractor and crane/baler are designed and constructed as a single unit. Nor does the restrictive provision in section 12(3)(a) as to when heavy oil is to be deemed to be used as fuel for a road vehicle assist in determining that question.

 

Disposal

[14] For these reasons we refuse this appeal.


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