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United Kingdom Upper Tribunal (Tax and Chancery Chamber) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Upper Tribunal (Tax and Chancery Chamber) >> Spectrum Community Health CIC v Commissioners for His Majesty's Revenue and Customs (VAT - exemption - Article 132(1)(b) VAT directive - provision of healthcare in prisons) [2024] UKUT 162 (TCC) (06 June 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/TCC/2024/162.html Cite as: [2024] UKUT 162 (TCC) |
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(Tax and Chancery Chamber)
Judgment Date: 6 June 2024 |
B e f o r e :
JUDGE SWAMI RAGHAVAN
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SPECTRUM COMMUNITY HEALTH CIC |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HIS MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
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For the Appellant: Melanie Hall KC and Ciar McAndrew, Counsel, instructed by RSM UK Tax and Accounting Limited
For the Respondents: James Henderson and Stephen Donnelly, Counsel, instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor to His Majesty's Revenue and Customs
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Crown Copyright ©
VAT - exemption – Article 132(1)(b) VAT directive – provision of healthcare in prisons - whether FTT erred in holding supplies of drugs and contraceptives were not separate taxable supplies – no – appeal dismissed
Introduction
law
"on each transaction, VAT calculated on the price of the goods and services at the rate applicable to such goods or services shall be chargeable after deduction of the amount of VAT borne directly by the various cost components."
(1) One or more elements are to be regarded as constituting the principal services, while one or more elements are to be regarded as ancillary services which share the tax treatment of the principal element. (Card Protection Plan Ltd v Customs and Excise Comrs (Case-349/96) ("CPP");
(2) Two or more elements are so closely linked that they form a single, indivisible economic supply which it would be artificial to split (Levob Verzekeringen and OV Bank v Staatssecretaris van Financien (Case C-41/04) ("Levob"); or
(3) The relevant provision of the PVD provides for "closely related activities" to share the exemption of an exempt supply.
"Exemptions for certain activities in the public interest
Article 132
1. Member States shall exempt the following transactions:
…
(b) hospital and medical care and closely related activities undertaken by bodies governed by public law or, under social conditions comparable with those applicable to bodies governed by public law, by hospitals, centres for medical treatment or diagnosis and other duly recognised establishments of a similar nature;
(c) the provision of medical care in the exercise of the medical and paramedical professions as defined by the Member State concerned; …"
"…it follows from the characterisation of an operation comprising several elements as a single supply that that operation will be subject to one and the same rate of VAT…".
EC v UK
"…In those circumstances, apart from minor provisions of goods which are strictly necessary at the time when the care is provided, the supply of medicines and other goods, such as corrective spectacles provided by a doctor or by other authorised persons, is physically and economically dissociable from the provision of the service.
34. It follows that the exemption from tax of goods supplied in connection with the medical care referred to in indent (c) cannot be justified by indent (b) as the United Kingdom maintains."
Klinikum
(1) The words "closely-related activities" in exemption b) covered goods as well as services.
(2) Medical care and related activities under exemption b) did not have to be undertaken by the same person.
(3) Activities that were "closely-related" could not be exempt if the care to which they were closely related was under exemption c) rather than exemption b) ([40]).
(4) The relevant care in Klinikum could not fall under exemption b) because it was not provided on the premises of the relevant body and it was not also provided by that body or establishment (as required by that provision) ([33]). The Advocate General therefore proceeded on the basis the care provided by doctors was exempt pursuant to exemption c).
(5) The Advocate General highlighted the absence of the words "closely related activities" in 13A(1)(c), which exemption did not "extend beyond the provision of the care itself". She went on to explain EC v UK as follows:
"37. In that regard, the court declared in Commission v UK that, 'apart from minor provisions of goods which are strictly necessary at the time when the care is provided, the supply of medicines and other goods, such as corrective spectacles prescribed by a doctor or by other authorised persons, is physically and economically dissociable from the provision of the service'.
38. That case was concerned particularly with the supply of prescribed spectacles, and the court regarded the supply of prescribed medicines in the same light. In the circumstances considered, the acts of diagnosis (together with any minor and strictly necessary supplies of goods—such as, perhaps, the administration of eye-drops to enlarge the pupils) and prescription form a single supply falling within the exemption in art 13A(1)(c) of the Sixth Directive. The same would presumably apply to the supply of any items—such as, for example, ointments or bandages—essential to any actual treatment performed by the practitioner in the course of a consultation. By contrast, the supply by an optician or pharmacist of any items prescribed by the practitioner is a separate supply which does not fall within that exemption."
(6) Although the supply of prescribed drugs in the course of medical care could not fall under exemption b) if the care to which it was closely related was under c), that did not mean the drug supply could not be exempted under c) itself. At [41] AG Sharpston explained:
"However, it might not necessarily follow that, in the specific circumstances of the main proceedings, the supply of the drugs cannot be exempted under art 13A(1)(c) itself. The supply could perhaps be regarded not as a 'closely related activity' but as a supply 'which is strictly necessary at the time when the care is provided' and not 'physically and economically dissociable from the provision of the service', to use the court's words in European Commission v UK."
"46.…there is a therapeutic continuum, which encompasses both 'the provision of medical care in the exercise of the medical and paramedical professions' and a supply of drugs. It is also clear that, without the supply of the drugs, the medical care itself would serve no purpose; that supply is, therefore, 'strictly necessary at the time when the care is provided'."
"…In that regard, it is necessary to consider by whom, and to whom, the supply of drugs is made. That question was addressed at the hearing and, although it was acknowledged that payment was made in almost every case by a private or public health insurance body, it seemed to be agreed that the 'right to dispose of [the drugs] as owner' is acquired by the patient. Neither the doctor nor the health insurance body may dictate to the patient whether to accept administration of the drugs or not. That makes it impossible to consider that the doctor passes on the supply of the drugs to the patient, as part and parcel of the medical care provided. It therefore seems necessary to proceed on the basis that the patient receives more than one supply: medical care from the doctor and healthcare staff; drugs from the hospital pharmacy.
49. Where separate supplies are made by separate persons, it seems inevitable that those supplies cannot 'form, objectively, a single, indivisible economic supply, which it would be artificial to split' or be 'physically and economically dissociable'. They may be (indeed, it appears that they are) 'closely related' and such a close relationship will qualify a supply of drugs to be exempted when the related provision of medical care is exempted under art 13A(1)(b) of the Sixth Directive, but not when it is exempted under art 13A(1)(c). In that regard, the separation between the person supplying the drugs and the person providing the medical care must in my view preclude the two from being regarded together as a single supply, regardless of the fact that neither supply can serve any useful purpose without the other—in contrast to, for example, the situation examined in Deutsche Bank, where two comparably interlinked supplies were made by the same taxable person."
Spectrum's case on EC v UK and Klinikum
(1) Goods can only fall within the c) exemption if they are "physically and economically indissociable". (There is no dispute that the case-law provides for such exception - for example a bandage or eye-drops applied in the course of treatment. HMRC do not however seek to argue the drugs and sexual health products here fall into that exception.)
(2) The above rule (generally) cannot be overridden by a single supply CPP/Levob analysis thereby expanding the scope of exemption c).
(3) Because of the inherently limited nature of exemption c) (its limitation to medical consultations carried out by certified practitioners within the confines of the confidential patient/practitioner relationship), medical care under exemption c) could never (in the circumstances of this case) be the predominant part of a single composite supply so as to make that supply exempt. (Ms Hall acknowledges this proposition is fact dependent. She accepts there could be circumstances where the medical care element would predominate giving the example of a medical consultation provided online where the service of accessing the online platform was provided in addition to the medical care).
(4) Medical care under exemption c) must be narrower than under exemption b) and things "closely-related" to b) (to avoid undermining the fact that "closely-related" words do not appear in c).
FTT Decision
"…supplies NHSE with primary healthcare services in 13 prisons in England. The services include GP, nursing, pharmacy, physiotherapy, substance misuse, mental health, dentistry and optometry services. The aim is that prison primary healthcare should resemble primary healthcare in the community as closely as possible. To that end, nurses conduct clinics and GPs conduct regular surgeries in the prison and the prison pharmacy operates in a similar way to a community pharmacy…"
"Typically, NHSE requires providers to provide a full range of primary healthcare related services in prisons under the relevant contract….NHSE holds a contract with a single lead (or apex) provider, such as Spectrum, who in turn either directly provides care and/or sub-contracts parts of the care, eg pharmaceutical services, to other specialist providers (under certain conditions). The lead provider will ensure that all services within the prison operate in an integrated way and will be accountable not only for the services provided directly but also for the functioning of the healthcare services as a whole. All current contracts between NHSE and Spectrum are apex contracts and Spectrum is the lead provider. Spectrum provides some services itself and sub-contracts the provision of the remainder."
Grounds of appeal
(1) Ground 1: the FTT erred in deciding to resolve the issue of whether Spectrum made multiple supplies (under CPP/Levob) before reaching a decision on the contested scope of Article 132(1)(c) of the PVD.
(2) Ground 2: the FTT erred in finding that EC v UK and Klinikum did not decide that supplies of drugs or goods (other than minor supplies strictly necessary for and not physically and economically dissociable from medical care) could never be elements in a single supply of medical care.
(3) Ground 3: the FTT wrongly resolved the single/multiple supply issue by reference to the perspective of NHSE on the basis that NHSE was the contractual recipient of Spectrum's supplies. The FTT ought to have taken the patient's perspective.
(4) Ground 4: the FTT made an Edwards v Bairstow error of law– the only conclusion open to the FTT on the evidence was that Spectrum made multiple supplies including supply of medical care and supply of prescribed drugs and contraceptives.
Ground 1 – the FTT erred in taking the issues in the wrong order
"According to the court's case law, where a transaction comprises a bundle of elements and acts, regard must be had to all the circumstances in which the transaction in question takes place in order to determine, firstly, if there are two or more distinct supplies or one single supply and, secondly, whether, in the latter case, the single supply falls within the exemption in question…"
Ground 2 – the EC v UK error
FTT's treatment of EC v UK and Klinikum
Spectrum's submissions
Discussion
(1) Spectrum's reliance on [37] and [38] (set out at [18(5)] above), and the lack of reference in them to CPP/Levob is misplaced. In this passage the Advocate General is simply summarising the reasoning in EC v UK (which did not address the question of single vs multiple supplies).
(2) We also reject Spectrum's contention that the FTT was wrong to say that the Advocate General described Levob and CPP as a variant of EC v UK. The Advocate General said at [42]: "A variant of that possibility might be [the test for Levob or CPP]". The words "that possibility" referred to the preceding paragraph which contained the exception regarding physically and economically indissociable goods in EC v UK.
(3) Spectrum also highlights the tentative nature ("…might be…") of the language the Advocate General used in describing the Levob /CPP approach. That, however, reflected the lack of support for the conclusion on the facts, not a doubt as to the legal position.
FTT misunderstood Spectrum's concession/ oversimplified Spectrum's case?
Ground 3 – Error of contractual approach
"…In my view, that is not the correct analysis. While the prisoners are undoubtedly beneficiaries of the provision of medical care by Spectrum, that does not mean that they are recipients of the supply for VAT purposes. As the Supreme Court has made clear on a number of occasions, determining who makes and receives a supply is a two-stage process which starts with consideration of the contractual position and then looks at whether that is consistent with the economic and commercial reality (see WHA Ltd v HMRC [2013] UKSC 24, [2013] STC 943 ('WHA') at [27], Secret Hotels2 Ltd v HMRC [2014] UKSC 16, [2014] STC 937 ('SH2') at [35], HMRC v Airtours Holidays Transport Ltd [2016] UKSC 21, [2016] STC 1509 ('Airtours') at [47]). There is no suggestion in this case that the contractual position does not reflect the economic reality of the transactions. On the basis of the contracts and the evidence, it is clear that NHSE is the recipient of the supplies made by Spectrum.
61. Accordingly, NHSE is the average consumer from whose perspective I must view the elements of the transactions."
"29. In this respect, taking into account, first, that it follows from art 2(1) of the Sixth Directive that every supply of a service must normally be regarded as distinct and independent and, second, that a supply which comprises a single service from an economic point of view should not be artificially split, so as not to distort the functioning of the VAT system, the essential features of the transaction must be ascertained in order to determine whether the taxable person is supplying the customer, being a typical consumer, with several distinct principal services or with a single service.
30. There is a single supply in particular in cases where one or more elements are to be regarded as constituting the principal service, whilst one or more elements are to be regarded, by contrast, as ancillary services which share the tax treatment of the principal service. A service must be regarded as ancillary to a principal service if it does not constitute for customers an aim in itself, but a means of better enjoying the principal service supplied…". [Emphasis added]
"In order to determine whether the taxable person is supplying the customer—envisaged as being a typical consumer—with several distinct principal services or with a single service, the essential features of the transaction must be ascertained and regard must be had to all the circumstances in which that transaction takes place (see, to that effect, CPP (paras 28 and 29); Aktiebolaget NN (paras 21 and 22); Ludwig (para 17); and order in Tiercé Ladbroke and Derby (paras 19 and 20))."
"22. The Court determines whether this is the case by ascertaining the essential features or characteristic elements of the transaction from the perspective of the "typical consumer".
23. It is therefore crucial whether the typical consumer (the typical recipient of the supply) regards the supply received as multiple distinct supplies or as a single supply. The decisive criterion is the generally accepted view, that is to say, the understanding of the general public. By having regard to the 'typical consumer', the Court applies a generalisation which it also uses in other fields of law." [Emphasis added]
"The contractual structure in question is likewise irrelevant. The VAT assessment of a transaction cannot depend on the contractual arrangements available under national civil law. If, as is the case here to some extent, multiple supplies are made on the basis of a single contract under civil law, this does not call into question the independence of those supplies for VAT purposes."
"…the level of generality which correspond[ed] with social and economic reality [was] to regard the transaction as the patient's visit to the doctor for treatment and not to split it into smaller units…"
"28. Item 4 of Group 7 of Schedule 9 to the VAT Act 1994 is not worded in such a way as to suggest that the identity of the recipient of the supply is of the essence. The provision of care or medical or surgical treatment will of course always be to a natural person but that does not mean that, from the VAT point of view, the supply cannot be to a legal person. For example a self employed consultant may well supply his services to a hospital for VAT purposes rather than to an individual but those services will still consist of the care of natural persons. We did not understand Mr Southern to have argued to the contrary. His argument was that the supply of services took on an altogether different character from that of the supply of care or medical services for the reasons summarised in paragraph 18 above. We do not agree. The fact that the operations of the appellant could be said to include those described in the Treasury Direction does not mean that they must be so characterised. The fact is that the essence of what is supplied is treatment, not the operation of a hospital. The acceptance of economic risk is not the essence of the supplies made by the appellant and is at best a better means for the Trust to enjoy the services supplied under the contract to the Trust.
29. For the same reasons that we have concluded that there is a composite supply we hold that the supplies are supplies of care and medical treatment. That is their predominant characteristic. No supply took place when the clinic was built, staffed and equipped. Supplies only began when patients were referred. The essence of the supply is the treatment of patients."
Ground 4 Edwards v Bairstow
(1) Prisoners do not take up all services – for instance a prisoner may see a GP but may not receive a prescription, or a repeat prescription may not require medical care (FTT [38]). Self-evidently a prisoner might get nursing care but no other services, they might get optometry but not dentistry. The services are provided independently, and the prisoner may choose to receive them separately. Each is thus an end in itself.
(2) The services are provided to prisoners in different physical locations (FTT [39]). Doctors conduct GP surgeries, and each prison has separate consulting room for this purpose. The evidence referred to the pharmacy dispensing and it could reasonably be assumed that, as well as e.g. dentistry and optometry services would be carried out at different specific locations.
(3) Services are provided by different personnel with different specialist functions. For example, pharmacists dispense medication (FTT [40]). Sexual health services are provided principally by specialist nurses (FTT [43]). The highly specialist nature of the healthcare services including optometry, podiatry and physiotherapy would obviously require different trained personnel.
(4) Prisoners do not generally receive all or most of services at same time. For instance drugs are dispensed after a GP consultation and this also flows from the fact different services are provided at different physical locations at different times.
(5) Prisoners who receive dispensed drugs have the choice whether to take them. The same is true of contraceptive products. Consumption is separate from the care provided by the GP.
(6) Contraceptive products may ordinarily be provided separately to medical care (products may be available outside of healthcare wing, condoms provided to all prisoners who ask for them).
(7) There are distinct service specifications for each distinct element of the NHSE contract. The FTT gave pharmacy services as the example (FTT [30]) but it can be seen the other ones are set out differently with different personnel, times of provision and with their own scope and objectives. Additionally, Spectrum can choose to sub-contract under the overarching contract (sub-contracting for instance the supply and dispensing of drugs to community pharmacies) (FTT [19], [33-34], [40] [42]). The fact that particular services could be subcontracted and hived off showed they were regulated separately.
(8) The way in which the contract was used and its scope of services were not static and varied over time. Under the original contract Spectrum was a "partnership provider" only responsible for delivering some of the services which made up the full suite of health care services – other services were commissioned separately from different providers. That changed in 2013 to Spectrum being a lead provider under an "apex" contract. Ms McAndrew submitted the fluidity of the commissioning structure indicated the services were separate - with services coming in (e.g. mental health) and going out (e.g. dentistry).
(9) The cost of each service is easily identifiable (HMRC did not appear to dispute this but highlight a single headline price is invoiced).
Conclusion