![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
First-tier Tribunal (Tax) |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (Tax) >> Burton & Ors v Revenue & Customs [2009] UKFTT 203 (TC) (16 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/TC/2009/TC00156.html Cite as: [2009] STI 2632, [2009] SFTD 682, [2009] WTLR 1499, [2009] UKFTT 203 (TC) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
[2009] UKFTT 203 (TC)
TC00156
Appeal number: SC/3100/2008
CAPITAL GAINS TAX – ss 86, 87, 90, 97 and Schedule 5 TCGA -"Flip Flop"- whether taxpayer still interested within s.86(1)(d) in first settlement from which he was excluded because money borrowed by first settlement settled on second settlement? No – Whether taxpayer regarded as receiving capital payment within s.87(4) when money transferred to second settlement? Yes – Whether outright payment of money within s.97(4)? Yes – Appeal allowed in part
THE FIRST-TIER TRIBUNAL
TAX CHAMBER
ERNEST BURTON
ERNEST FLOATE
DAVID LEECH
GORDON PIRRET
DAVENDRA PRATAP
TERRY SIMPSON Appellants
- and –
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS Respondents
Before THEODORE WALLACE and ADRIAN SHIPWRIGHT
sitting as Special Commissioners
Sitting in public in London on 16-17 February 2009
Kevin Prosser QC, instructed by McGrigors LLP, for the Appellants
Timothy Brennan QC, instructed by the Solicitor to HM Revenue and Customs, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2009
DECISION
Introduction
The Issue
The Law
"(1) This section applies where the following conditions are fulfilled as regards a settlement in a particular year of assessment—
(a) the settlement is a qualifying settlement in the year;
(b) the trustees of the settlement fulfil the condition as to residence specified in subsection (2) below;
(c) a person who is a settlor in relation to the settlement ('the settlor') is domiciled in the United Kingdom at some time in the year and is either resident in the United Kingdom during any part of the year or ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom during the year;
(d) at any time during the year the settlor has an interest in the settlement;
(e) by virtue of disposals of any of the settled property originating from the settlor, there is an amount on which the trustees would be chargeable to tax for the year under section 2(2) if the assumption as to residence specified in subsection (3) below were made;
(f) paragraph 3, 4 or 5 of Schedule 5 does not prevent this section applying.
(2) The condition as to residence is that—
(a) the trustees are not resident or ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom during any part of the year, or
(b) …
(3) Where subsection (2)(a) above applies, the assumption as to residence is that the trustees are resident or ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom throughout the year; …
(4) Where this section applies—
(a) chargeable gains of an amount equal to that referred to in subsection (1)(e) above shall be treated as accruing to the settlor in the year, and
(b) those gains shall be treated as forming the highest part of the amount on which he is chargeable to capital gains tax for the year.
(4A) …
(5) Schedule 5 (which contains provisions supplementary to this section) shall have effect".
"2(1) For the purposes of section 86(1)(d) a settlor has an interest in a settlement if –
(a) any relevant property which is or may at any time be comprised in the settlement is, or will or may become, applicable for the benefit of or payable to a defined person in any circumstances whatever,
(b) any relevant income which arises or may arise under the settlement is, or will or may become, applicable for the benefit of or payable to a defined person in any circumstances whatever, or
(c) any defined person enjoys a benefit directly or indirectly from any relevant property which is comprised in the settlement or any relevant income arising under the settlement;
but this sub-paragraph is subject to sub-paragraphs (4) to (6) and paragraph 2A below.
(2) For the purposes of sub-paragraph (1) above—
(a) relevant property is property originating from the settlor,
(b) relevant income is income originating from the settlor.
(3) For the purposes of sub-paragraph (1) above each of the following is a defined person—
(a) the settlor,
(b) the settlor's spouse;
(c) any child of the settlor or of the settlor's spouse;
(d) the spouse of any such child;
(da) any grandchild of the settlor or of the settlor's spouse;
(db) the spouse of any such grandchild;
(e) a company controlled by a person or persons falling within paragraphs (a) to (db) above;
(f) a company associated with a company falling within paragraph (e) above.
(4) A settlor does not have an interest in a settlement by virtue of paragraph ...a) of sub-paragraph (1) above at any time when none of the property concerned can become applicable or payable as mentioned in that paragraph except in the event of—
(a) the bankruptcy of some person who is or may become beneficially entitled to the property,
(b) any assignment of or charge on the property being made or given by some such person,
(c) in the case of a marriage settlement, the death of both parties to the marriage and of all or any of the children of the marriage, or
(d) the death under the age of 25 or some lower age of some person who would be beneficially entitled to the property on attaining that age.
(5) A settlor does not have an interest in a settlement by virtue of paragraph (a) of sub-paragraph (1) above at any time when some person is alive and under the age of 25 if during that person's life none of the property concerned can become applicable or payable as mentioned in that paragraph except in the event of that person becoming bankrupt or assigning or charging his interest in the property concerned.
(6) Sub-paragraphs (4) and (5) above apply for the purposes of paragraph (b) of sub-paragraph (1) above as they apply for the purposes of paragraph (a), reading "income" for "property".
(7) In this paragraph—
(a) 'child' includes a stepchild; and
(b) 'grandchild' means a child of a child.…"
"(1) This section applies to a settlement for any year of assessment during which the trustees are at no time resident or ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom.
(2) There shall be computed in respect of every year of assessment for which this section applies the amount on which the trustees would have been chargeable to tax under section 2(2) if they had been resident or ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom in the year; and that amount, together with the corresponding amount in respect of any earlier such year so far as not already treated under subsection (4) below or section 89(2) as chargeable gains accruing to beneficiaries under the settlement, is in this section and sections 89 and 90 referred to as the trust gains for the year.
(3) Where as regards the same settlement and for the same year of assessment—
(a) chargeable gains, whether of one amount or of 2 or more amounts, are treated as accruing by virtue of section 86(4), and
(b) an amount falls to be computed under subsection (2) above,
the amount so computed shall be treated as reduced by the amount, or aggregate of the amounts, mentioned in paragraph (a) above.
(4) Subject to the following provisions of this section, the trust gains for a year of assessment shall be treated as chargeable gains accruing in that year to beneficiaries of the settlement who receive capital payments from the trustees in that year or have received such payments in any earlier year.
(5) The attribution of chargeable gains to beneficiaries under subsection (4) above shall be made in proportion to, but shall not exceed, the amounts of the capital payments received by them."
Subsections (6) onwards are not relevant to this appeal.
9. Section 97 contained provisions supplementary to section 87. They read so far as is relevant as follows.
"(1) In sections 86A to 96 and this section 'capital payment'—
(a) means any payment which is not chargeable to income tax on the recipient or, in the case of a recipient who is neither resident nor ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom, any payment received otherwise than as income, but
(b) does not include a payment under a transaction entered into at arm's length if it is received on or after 19th March 1991.
(2) In subsection (1) above references to a payment include references to the transfer of an asset and the conferring of any other benefit, and to any occasion on which settled property becomes property to which section 60 applies.
(3) …
(4) For the purposes of sections 86A to 96 the amount of a capital payment made by way of loan, and of any other capital payment which is not an outright payment of money, shall be taken to be equal to the value of the benefit conferred by it.
(5) For the purposes of sections 86A to 90 a capital payment shall be regarded as received by a beneficiary from the trustees of a settlement if—
(a) he receives it from them directly or indirectly, or
(b) it is directly or indirectly applied by them in payment of any debt of his or is otherwise paid or applied for his benefit, or
(c) it is received by a third person at the beneficiary's direction.
Factual Background
"(3) Mr. Burton was at all times resident, ordinarily resident and domiciled in the United Kingdom for all United Kingdom tax purposes.
(4) In 1993 Mr. Burton participated with institutional investors in a management buy-out. The acquisition vehicle for the management buy-out was Streamline Holdings Limited ('SHL'). SHL was incorporated and funded by management and the institutions, as part of which Mr. Burton subscribed personally for shares in SHL. Mr. Burton paid £31,250 to subscribe for 31,250 B ordinary shares in its SHL, each share having a nominal value of £0.01.
(5) On 29 November 1994 Mr. Burton established the E. W. Burton 1994 Trust (the '1994 Trust') with the initial sum of £10. Mr. Burton was the life tenant. The sole trustee of was Abacus Trust Company (Isle of Man) Limited, which was resident in the Isle of Man.
(6) Shortly thereafter the trustee incorporated Broomhurst Limited (a Manx company). The trustee was the sole member of Broomhurst.
(7) On 30 November 1994 Mr. Burton settled his 31,250 SHL shares as an addition to the trust fund of the 1994 Trust, and on 6 December 1994 the trustee transferred those shares to Broomhurst.
(8) On 7 February 1996 SHL was listed on the London Stock Exchange, as part of which listing Broomhurst received additional shares by way of bonus issue. Such listing materially increased the value of the SHL shares held by Broomhurst.
(9) The director shareholders of SHL received tax advice set out in the document prepared for the director shareholders of Streamline Holdings plc entitled 'Report for the director shareholders of Streamline Holdings plc' which was received in April 1998 whilst they were considering the terms of a formal offer to acquire SHL.
(10) In or around June 1998 a public offer by Jarvis [plc] ('Jarvis') for the entire issued share capital of SHL (by then, as mentioned in paragraph (9) above, a plc) became unconditional. The offer allowed SHL shareholders to elect to exchange their SHL shares for Jarvis shares plus a cash sum, with an alternative offer of floating rate guaranteed unsecured loan notes of Jarvis (the 'Jarvis Loan Notes') for some or all of their SHL shares. Broomhurst. accepted the offer in exchange for the Jarvis Loan Notes in respect of its 500,000 SHL shares.
(11) On 3 March 1999 Mr. Burton established the E.W. Burton Interest in Possession Settlement (the '1999 Trust') with the initial sum of £5. Mr. P. H. Jenkins and Mr. W. J. Thomson were UK resident trustees of the 1999 Trust.
(12) On 5 March 1999 the trustee of the 1994 Trust borrowed from £1,433,129 Coutts Bank on security of the trustee's membership interest in Broomhurst.
(13) On 8 March 1999 in exercise of the power conferred by clause 7 of the 1994 Trust deed, the trustee of the 1994 Trust appointed £1,386,000 to the trustees of the 1999 Trust freed and discharged from the trusts powers and provisions of the 1994 Trust.
(14) On 1 April 1999 the trustee of the 1994 Trust excluded Mr. Burton, his wife, children and remoter issue from the class of beneficiaries and irrevocably released the power to add to the class of beneficiaries.
(15) In the next year of assessment, 1999-2000, Broomhurst redeemed the Jarvis Loan Notes, Broomhurst was liquidated and in the liquidation the proceeds of redemption were paid up to the trustee of the 1994 Trust which repaid the Coutts loan.
(16) The trustee of the 1999 Trust made no capital payments to Mr. Burton (or at all) in 1999-2000".
(a) Mr Burton, who was the settlor of both trusts, was resident, ordinarily resident and domiciled in the UK at all relevant times;
(b) The trustees of the 1994 Trust were resident outside and not in the UK for the whole of the years in question;
(c) The trustees of the 1999 Trust were resident in the UK and not outside the UK for the whole of the years in question;
(d) Until the exclusions on 1 April 1999 from the class of beneficiaries the 1994 Trust was a qualifying settlement as defined in TCGA, Schedule 5, paragraph 9, the 1994 Trust having been created after 18 March 1991;
(e) Apart from the paper for paper exchange and the redemption of the Loan Notes we are not concerned with arm's length transactions;
(f) The "rollover" provisions in section 135 applied to this paper for paper exchange so it was not a disposal for capital gains tax purposes. Accordingly, on a redemption of the Jarvis Loan Notes a capital gain could arise as these had a base cost related to the old shares. A gain could thus arise to Broomhurst on a disposal of the Jarvis Loan Notes which under TCGA section 13 could be attributed to the trustees of the 1994 Trust and potentially to a settlor or beneficiary;
(g) The persons excluded from benefits under the 1994 Trust on 1 April 1999 were all defined persons within the meaning of Schedule 5, paragraph 2 (3). This was before the start of the year of assessment 1999-2000, the year in question here;
(h) This is not a "conduit" case like Herman v Revenue and Customs Commissioners [2007] STC (SCD) 571 where the assets went in and the money came out in a very short time.
Section 86
(1) Mr. Burton was excluded from the 1994 Trust before the year of assessment in question and so had no interest under the 1994 Trust in the year in question, 1999-2000;
(2) Mr. Burton was entitled to the income of the 1999 Trust as life tenant of the 1999 Trust;
(3) That entitlement was not a direct or an indirect benefit from the 1994 Trust as the property in the 1999 Trust was not repayable to the 1994 Trust; the entitlement to income was a consequence of being the life tenant of the 1999 Trust; the fact that he was interested to the income from the 1999 Trust had nothing to do with the 1994 Trust from which, at the relevant time, Mr Burton was excluded;
(4) The assets in the 1994 Trust remained there and were not available to Mr. Burton or the 1999 Trust;
(5) Mr Burton did not "enjoy a benefit directly or indirectly from any... property... comprised" in the 1994 Trust; for the purposes of paragraphs 2(1)(c) of Schedule 5, Mr. Burton did not "enjoy" the membership interest in Broomhurst, even indirectly; for paragraph 2(1)(c) actual receipt is required, see Lord Walker in Trennery v West [2005] STC 214, HL particularly [37];
(6) Further, paragraph 2(1)(c) must be interpreted so as to give meaning to subparagraphs 2(4) and 2(5);
(7) Trennery v West is binding authority or at least of strong persuasive influence on the Special Commissioners; the wording of TCGA, section 77 (except for the addition of the "derived property" provisions) is the same as the wording under consideration here; accordingly, if there was no interest under the settlement in Trennery v West without the derived property wording, there can be no interest under the 1994 Trust here as the derived property wording is not included in the relevant legislation.
(1) Section 86 should be given a purposive construction; its aim is to counter tax avoidance; these were arrangements to allow Mr Burton to enjoy the value of the Jarvis Loan Notes without suffering the associated capital gains tax charge; the essence of flip-flop schemes, such as this, is that "matters are manipulated so that the CGT liability which would have arisen (typically, as here, on an arm's length disposal of unquoted shares) is reduced or eliminated";
(2) Mr. Burton enjoyed an indirect benefit under paragraph 2(1)(c) of Schedule 5 from the 1994 Trust because he was the life tenant of the 1999 Trust;
(3) The moneys in the 1999 Trust came from a borrowing secured on the membership interest in Broomhurst which remained in the 1994 Trust; the borrowing could only be repaid out of the proceeds of the redemption of the Jarvis Loan Notes held by Broomhurst; this allowed the transfer from the 1994 Trust to the 1999 Trust of the value of the Jarvis Loan Notes; accordingly, there was indirect enjoyment of the Broomhurst membership interest under paragraph 2 (1)(c);
(4) There was no real difference in Mr Burton's economic position except that the planning in anticipation of the planned disposal of the Jarvis Loan Notes was intended to prevent a section 86 charge arising; the value of the Jarvis Loan Notes was made available to Mr Burton and indirectly enjoyed by him by virtue of the money borrowed on the security of a property in the 1994 Trust being paid out to the 1999 Trust;
(5) West v Trennery does not assist the Appellant, and is not binding as to paragraph 2(1)(c) on indirect benefit; in any event it was concerned with different statutory wording and so, at most, of limited value in the present context.
"It is common ground that, had section 77 not referred to 'derived property', that section would have ceased to apply to the first settlement at the end of the 1994-95 year of assessment. The issue is whether the 'derived property' provisions produce a different result."
Section 87
THEODORE WALLACE
ADRIAN SHIPWRIGHT
JUDGES OF THE TRIBUNAL
RELEASED: 16 July 2009