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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> John Mander Pension Trustees Ltd v Revenue and Customs (Rev 1) [2015] UKSC 56 (29 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2015/56.html Cite as: [2015] 4 All ER 896, [2015] STC 2231, [2015] 1 WLR 3857, [2015] WLR 3857, [2015] WLR(D) 356, [2015] UKSC 56, [2015] BTC 25, [2015] STI 2530 |
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Trinity Term
[2015] UKSC 56
On appeal from: [2013] EWCA Civ 1683
John Mander Pension Trustees Limited (Appellant) v Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs (Respondent)
before
Lord Neuberger, President
Lord Sumption
Lord Reed
Lord Carnwath
Lord Hodge
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
Heard on 16 June 2015
Appellant Andrew Thornhill QC Jeremy Woolf (Instructed by Ansons LLP) |
Respondent Akash Nawbatt (Instructed by HMRC Solicitors Office) |
LORD SUMPTION: (with whom Lord Neuberger and Lord Reed agree)
Introduction
The statutory framework
(1) Section 591A was in effect a transitional provision relating to schemes which had received discretionary approval under section 591 but ceased to qualify as a result of restrictions subsequently introduced by regulations under section 591(6). Their approval ceased automatically 36 months after the introduction of the regulations if the scheme still failed to comply with them.
(2) Section 591B(1), which was the basis on which the approval of the Mander scheme was withdrawn, provided:
"If in the opinion of the Board the facts concerning any approved scheme or its administration cease to warrant the continuance of their approval of the scheme, they may at any time by notice to the administrator, withdraw their approval on such grounds, and from such date (which shall not be earlier than the date when those facts first ceased to warrant the continuance of their approval or 17 March 1987, whichever is the later), as maybe specified in the notice."
(3) Section 591B(2) provided that where an alteration had been made to a scheme which was neither specifically approved by the Revenue nor generally authorised by regulations, "no approval given by the Board as regards the scheme before the alteration shall apply after the date of the alteration …"
"591C Cessation of approval: tax on certain schemes
(l) Where an approval of a scheme to which this section applies ceases to have effect ..., tax shall be charged in accordance with this section.
(2) The tax shall be charged under Case VI of Schedule D at the rate of 40% on an amount equal to the value of the assets which immediately before the date of the cessation of the approval of the scheme are held for the purposes of the scheme (taking that value as it stands immediately before that date).
(3) Subject to section 591D(4), the person liable for the tax shall be the administrator of the scheme."
Section 591D contains supplementary provisions. For present purposes, only subsection (7) is relevant:
"(7) The reference in section 591C(l) to an approval of a scheme ceasing to have effect is a reference to –
(a) the scheme ceasing to be an approved scheme by virtue of section 591A(2);
(b) the approval of the scheme being withdrawn under section 591B(l);
(c) the approval of the scheme no longer applying by virtue of section 591B(2);
and any reference in section 591C to the date of the cessation of the approval of the scheme shall be construed accordingly."
In respect of what year does the charge to tax arise?
"(3) This section shall apply in relation to any approval of a retirement benefits scheme which ceases to have effect on or after 2 November 1994 other than an approval ceasing to have effect by virtue of a notice given before that day under section 591B(1)of the Taxes Act 1988."
2 November 1994 was the date when the Revenue announced its intention to promote legislation imposing a tax charge on the assets of schemes ceasing to qualify for approval. The purpose of section 61(3) is to ensure that the tax charge introduced by section 591C does not apply unless both the cessation of approval and the giving of notice of withdrawal of approval under section 591B(1) occurred after that date. It presupposes that the date when an approval "ceases to have effect" is not the same as the date when notice is given to that effect.
Alleged anomalies
Retroactivity
"In this case the contract was not void; it was merely voidable on the ground that it had been induced by fraudulent misrepresentations. When a contract has been induced by fraudulent misrepresentations, it is open to the party defrauded either to sue for rescission of the contract or to sue for damages. In this case the party sued for rescission and in the end of the day he obtained a decree of reduction. The effect of that reduction was to restore things to their position at the date of the transaction reduced, with the result that as at that date and afterwards the successful pursuer in the action fell to be treated as having been the person in titulo of the shares which he had sold to the defender and therefore to have been in right of the dividends. No doubt it is true that in the interval the dividends had to be paid and were paid to the defender because his name stood in the register as the proprietor of the shares and no doubt also they were for the time being treated by the Inland Revenue as his income and while matters stood entire no other person had any right to the shares or to the dividends except the defender, Mr Crawford. But from the moment the reduction took place Mr Spence fell to be treated as having been throughout the proprietor of the shares and equally the person properly entitled to receive the dividends. On the other hand the Inland Revenue repaid to Mr Crawford the surtax attributable to the dividends actually paid to him by the company on the footing that he had never been in titulo to receive them."
The critical feature of this case was that although the assessment arose out of the order for reduction, and operated ab initio, its effect was to restore the parties to the situation in which they would have been in 1933 but for the fraud.
"A retrospective order cannot, any more than a retrospective agreement, undo the past and convert something that has already happened, and to which legal consequences have already attached, into something which never in fact did happen. … [In Spence] the restitutio in integrum represented by the court order obtained some years later did not so much reconstruct history as recognise and declare that which had all along been the legal position, although until the order the parties were in a state of some uncertainty as to what their rights were."
Difficulties of enforcement
Conclusion
LORD NEUBERGER:
LORD REED:
(1) where the scheme fails to comply with regulations, 36 months after the introduction of the regulations (section 591A(2));
(2) where the facts concerning the scheme cease to warrant the continuance of approval (section 591B(1)); and
(3) where an unapproved and unauthorised alteration is made to the scheme (section 591B(2)).
The first of these is a transitional provision, as Lord Sumption has explained. The second and third address the type of problem which I have discussed.
"(l) Where an approval of a scheme to which this section applies ceases to have effect ... tax shall be charged in accordance with this section.
(2) The tax shall be charged under Case VI of Schedule D at the rate of 40% on an amount equal to the value of the assets which immediately before the date of the cessation of the approval of the scheme are held for the purposes of the scheme (taking that value as it stands immediately before that date).
(3) Subject to section 591D(4), the person liable for the tax shall be the administrator of the scheme."
Tax is to therefore to be charged where an approval ceases to have effect. The portion of the fund which is to be paid in tax is 40%: a figure corresponding to the higher rate tax relief which will in most cases have been granted to the contributors to the scheme.
"(7) The reference in section 591C(1) to an approval of a scheme ceasing to have effect is a reference to –
(a) the scheme ceasing to be an approved scheme by virtue of section 591A(2);
(b) the approval of the scheme being withdrawn under section 591B(l);
(c) the approval of the scheme no longer applying by virtue of section 591B(2);
and any reference in section 591C to the date of the cessation of the approval of the scheme shall be construed accordingly."
LORD HODGE: (dissenting with whom Lord Carnwath agrees)
The statutory framework
(i) Approval ceased automatically if, by the end of 36 months after regulations made under section 591 had come into force, a retirement benefits scheme contained a provision that the regulations prohibited or did not contain a provision that the regulations required (section 591A(2)).
(ii) Section 591B(1), which is relevant in this appeal, provided:
"If in the opinion of the Board the facts concerning any approved scheme or its administration cease to warrant the continuance of their approval of the scheme, they may at any time by notice to the administrator, withdraw their approval on such grounds, and from such date (which shall not be earlier than the date when those facts first ceased to warrant the continuance of their approval or 17 March 1987, whichever is the later), as may be specified in the notice."
(iii) Approval also ceased automatically whenever the terms of a retirement benefits scheme were altered without obtaining the approval of HMRC (section 591B(2)).
"(1) Where an approval of a scheme to which this section applies ceases to have effect …, tax shall be charged in accordance with this section.
(2) The tax shall be charged under Case VI of Schedule D at the rate of 40% on an amount equal to the value of the assets which immediately before the date of the cessation of the approval of the scheme are held for the purposes of the scheme (taking that value as it stands immediately before that date).
(3) Subject to section 591D(4), the person liable for the tax shall be the administrator of the scheme."
"The reference in section 591C(1) to an approval of a scheme ceasing to have effect is a reference to
(a) the scheme ceasing to be an approved scheme by virtue of section 591A(2);
(b) the approval of the scheme being withdrawn under section 591B(1); or
(c) the approval of the scheme no longer applying by virtue of section 591B(2);
and any reference in section 591C to the date of the cessation of the approval of the scheme shall be construed accordingly."
The factual background
The legal proceedings
Discussion
"Very clear words are … necessary to overturn the presumption against the retroactive operation of a taxing provision. … A provision designed to have retroactive operation would have to be enacted in clear and positive terms."
"A subject is only entitled to be taxed upon clear words, not upon 'intendment' or upon the 'equity' of an Act. Any taxing Act of Parliament is to be construed in accordance with this principle. What are 'clear words' is to be ascertained upon normal principles: these do not confine the courts to literal interpretation. There may, indeed should, be considered the context and scheme of the relevant Act as a whole, and its purpose may, indeed should, be regarded."
"This section shall apply in relation to any approval of a retirement benefits scheme which ceases to have effect on or after 2 November 1994 other than an approval ceasing to have effect by virtue of a notice given before that day under section 591B(1) of the Taxes Act 1988."
This transitional provision was designed to make sure that the tax charge under section 591C did not apply unless both the cessation of approval and the giving of the section 591B(1) notice occurred after 2 November 1994. Mr Thornhill for the appellants was correct in his submission that the draftsman of this provision must have thought that the date of "an approval ceasing to have effect" was not the same as the date of the section 591B notice. But, to my mind dubiously, the provision appears to assume that a section 591B notice could be made prospectively. In my view that understanding in a transitional provision, which did not become part of the corpus of the TA, does not provide the needed clarity to construe the substantive tax provision, section 591C, as a retroactive tax charge.
Conclusion
LORD CARNWATH: (who agrees with Lord Hodge)