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United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions >> Torfaen Voluntary Allliance v Customs and Excise [2004] UKVAT V18797 (15 October 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2004/V18797.html Cite as: [2004] UKVAT V18797 |
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18797
Zero-rating – Construction of a building – Church hall – New building capable of functioning independently – Whether annex – VATA 1994 Sch 8 Group 5, Note 16 & 17 – Appeal allowed
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE
TORFAEN VOLUNTARY ALLIANCE Appellant
- and –
THE COMMISSIONERS OF CUSTOMS AND EXCISE Respondents
Tribunal: DR K KHAN (Chairman)
MRS C S de ALBUQUERQUE
Sitting in public in London on 4 June 2004
Mr C Hawkins, VAT Consultant, for the Appellant
Mr R Keller for the Respondents
A. Introduction
B. Background
C. Statutory Provisions
"A supply of goods or services is zero rated by virtue of this sub-section if the goods or services are of a description for the time being supplied in Schedule 8…"
"The supply in the course of construction of –
(a) a building or part of a building designed as a dwelling or number of dwellings intended for use solely for a relevant residential purpose of a relevant charitable purpose… of any services related to the construction other than the services of an architect, surveyor or any person acting as a consultant or in a supervisory capacity"
"For the purposes of this Group, the construction of a building does not include:
(a) the conversion, reconstruction or alteration of an existing building; or
(b) any enlargement of, or extension to, an existing building except to the extent the enlargement or extension creates an additional dwelling or dwellings; or
(c) subject to Note (17) below, the construction of an annexe to an existing building."
"Note (16)(c) shall not apply [where the whole or part of an annexe is intended solely for irrelevant charitable purpose and]:
(a) [the annex] is capable of functioning independently from the existing building; and
(b) the only access or where there is more than one means of access, the main access to:
1) the annexe is not via the existing building; and
2) the existing building is not via the annex."
D. The Appellants' Case
E. The Respondent's Case
(a) The style and external appearance of the new construction compliments the existing building to the extent that the complete construction looks like a single building.
(b) The completed structure cannot be said to be a separate building with minimal physical connection so as to constitute an annexe.
(c) The new building is an enlargement of the existing building because the new areas are physically integrated with the existing building in a major, almost seamless, way.
(d) The works carried out have resulted in the formation of two new areas, each served by their own main entrance.
(e) If the new areas do comprise an annexe, which is not accepted, each new area is capable of functioning independently of the existing hall as required by Note (17)(a).
(f) The main entrance and existing hall at the premises is via a door in one of the new areas and, thus, does not comply with the requirements of Note (17)(b)(i) and so the works fall within the exclusion from zero-rating in Note (16)(c).
F. The Law
In their VAT Notice 708 at paragraph 2.8, which deals with annexes for a relevant charitable purpose it is provided:
"Where such an annexe is added to an existing building, you may still zero-rate your supplies if constructions services provided the annexe:
- is intended for use solely for a relevant charitable purpose;
- is capable of functioning independently from the existing building;
- has its own main entrance;
- does not provide the main entrance to the existing building; and
- is covered by the proper certificate."
The VAT Note goes on to say:
"The intention of this relief is to treat a charity annexe connected by a door or corridor to another building in the same way as we treat a fully independent structure separate from the existing building. As a guide, the new annexe must be capable of fulfilling the function fro which it was designed if the connection or corridor were to be closed. It does not zero-rate an enlargement or extension to an existing charity building.
It does not matter if there is more than one means of access, provided:
- the main entrance to the annexe is not via the existing building; and
- the main access to the existing building is not via the annexe."
Therefore, the conditions to be satisfied for a charitable purpose annexe are clear from the Customs' Note.
"The scheme of the 1995 code is to exclude from the expression "construction of a building" a series of building works. Note (16) deals with these in descending order of their degree of integration with the existing building. Conversion, reconstruction and the alterations of the existing buildings, most closely integrated are excluded. Enlargement of existing buildings are then excluded, the word "enlargement" connotes structural work producing an overall increase in size or capacity. The word "extension" when relating to an existing building refer, we think, to building works which provide an additional section or wing to that existing building; the degree of integration is one stage less and enlargement. Then comes "annexes" which, as a matter of principle are also excluded. The term "annex" connotes something that is adjoined but either not integrated with the existing building or of tenuous integration. Annexes intended for use solely for relevant charitable purposes are reinstated into the zero rating class by Note (17) only if they are capable of functioning independently and if the main access to the annexe is not via the existing building and the main access to the existing building is not via the annex. Otherwise, all annexes are excluded from zero rating".
It seems that the construction of an annexe can qualify for zero rating. The annexe which will be connected to the existing building must have independent access and be able to "function independently". It's a two stage test – the first question is whether or not it is an annexe, and the second is can it function independently and have independent access.
"not itself a principal building but a supplementary building, connected or associated with the main building and fulfilling a subordinate role in relation to that building."
"It would fly in the face of logic and the obvious intent of the legislation if a building which, if it had been physically divorced from the existing building, would have been zero-rates was excluded from zero-rating solely because it had some form of link. The building fitted the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary definition of an annexe as a "supplementary building independently of it, and had its own access …" "
It should be borne in mind that the shape of the new building and the degree of connection to the old may be determined, in part, by financial constraints and, in part, by planning constraints. In some circumstances, the attachment between the old and new may be more than minimal.
G. Conclusions
It is accepted by Customs & Excise that this requirement is satisfied. The Appellants, a registered charity, have been granted a long lease by the owners of the existing structure, the Diocesan Finance Board of the Church of Wales (a charity in its own right). The Appellants will occupy the offices and manage the toilet block for the local community. They are totally grant funded, so the offices would be entirely used for a non-business purposes.
This question requires that we look to see how the main building and supplementary buildings are connected and associated and whether one is subordinate to the other. It does not exclude some link between the buildings (i.e. old and new parts). Some cases classify this link as minimal. The external appearance of the existing Church Hall and the new building is well illustrated in photographs and architect's plans. At least seven plans were presented in evidence. The wall of the new building of red brick are different in colour from the original cream coloured hall. The photographs clearly show the junction of the new brick work with the old. The line of the roof continues from the old to the new part of the building. The architect plan (67/BR/10) ("the plan") appears to show the new construction to be along part of one wall of the existing structure. This can be considered minimal. Financial and planning constraints would require some form of linking and integration between the buildings in order to create a harmony of appearance but the new building, while connected to the existing building, is not an enlargement (increase in size of an existing building) or an extension (an additional wing or section of an existing building) but an annexe (a supplementary building).
It is required that the whole of the annexe must be capable of functioning independently without reliance on the existing building (excluding electricity, water and other supplies).
Customs & Excise have accepted in their letter of 23 July 2003 that the new building is capable of functioning independently of the existing hall.
The new building comprises offices, kitchen, storage and toilet facilities. It is over two floors with access on the ground and first floor level. There is nothing in the case of Customs & Excise to show that the new area is not capable of functioning independently and one would normally discount toilet and other services which, I understand, are in any event independently supplied.
The new building, while integrated structurally, can lead an independent life.
The main concern is that the access to the new building should not be through the existing building and vice versa. The new building should not create access to the existing building.
In looking at the architect's plan 67/BR/10, there are three entrances to the building. The main entrance to the toilet block (used by the larger community) and to the ground floor of the new building is through the door marked D.02 on the plan. The offices, which would be on the first floor, would be accessed through the entrance identified as D.01 of the plan. The existing Church Hall would be accessed through a door identified as D.03 on the plan. This position was confirmed by Mr John Charles Taylor, Finance Officer of the Appellants, in his oral evidence to the Tribunal and in correspondence between the Appellants and Mr Jonathan Mitchell, Customs & Excise Written Team, in their letter of 4 July 2003. There was concern by Customs & Excise that the inter-connecting double door linking the new and old buildings would be used as an entrance to the new building but it was confirmed in evidence by Mr John Charles Taylor that this was not the case and that doors would be kept locked and only opened on request.
Each part of the building, therefore, has its own access.
For the reasons given above, I will allow this Appeal and hold that works comprise an annexe within the requirements of Note 17(b)(ii) and should be zero-rated for the purposes of value added tax.
No order is made as to costs.
LON/03/756