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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 >> Care v Customs and Excise [2004] UKVAT V18826 (29 October 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2004/V18826.html Cite as: [2004] UKVAT V18826 |
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18826
Partial Exemption – Allowable Input Tax – Input tax on certain residual expenditure at care homes and hospices – whether agreed special method or standard method of apportionment applied to this residual expenditure – meaning of agreed special method - VATA 1994 s26(1)(2) and (3) - VAT Regs. 1995 S.I. 1995 No. 2518 regs. 101(1) and 102(1) and (3) - appeal dismissed
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE
SUE RYDER CARE Appellant
- and -
THE COMMISSIONERS OF CUSTOMS AND EXCISE Respondents
Tribunal: MALCOLM J F PALMER (Chairman)
BERNARD J COODE
Sitting in public in London on 7 and 8 September 2004
David Jordan, VAT Consultant, for the Appellant
Mrs Zoe Taylor, Counsel, instructed by the Solicitor for the Customs and Excise, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2004
DECISION
The Appeal
The Facts
"I refer to the correspondence concerning non-business VAT and the partial exemption special method.
The following method is proposed for the calculation of your deductible input tax.
A. The tax year to begin on 1 April and end on 31 March.
B. Identify all supplies you receive which are to be used wholly in the making of taxable supplies: the input tax thereon is deductible.
C. Identify all supplies you receive which are to be used wholly in making non business supplies: the VAT is not input tax and not deductible.
D. Identify all supplies you receive which are to be used wholly in making exempt supplies: the VAT thereon is exempt input tax, subject to restriction according to the partial exemption rules.
E. Any residual VAT is to be directly attributed to either (1) "Headquarters" VAT or (2) "Homes repairs" input tax.
(1) Headquarters VAT. To be apportioned between business and non-business supplies by apportioning in the ratio 91.31 : 8.69 (Jordans VAT Consultancy letter 6/4/01 refers).
a. Headquarters business input tax - to be reclaimed in the proportion that the value of your taxable supplies bears to the value of your taxable and exempt supplies. The exempt portion is exempt input tax and subject to restriction according to the partial exemption rules.
b. Headquarters non-business VAT is not input tax and not deductible.
(2) Homes repairs input tax - to be reclaimed in the proportion that your taxable homes income bears to the value of the total homes income. "
a. The 2001 Letter specifically refers to non business supplies;
b. The paragraph in the 1996 Letter covering taxable supplies equivalent to paragraph B in the 2001 Letter included, as an example, the words "(eg shop expenses)"; and
c. The paragraph in the 1996 Letter equivalent to paragraph D in the 2001 Letter included instead of the words "the VAT thereon is exempt input tax, subject to restriction according to the partial exemption rules" the words "the input [tax] thereon is not deductible. (In practice this means the general expenses of running the homes)."
The Legislative background cited to us
Sub-sections 26(1), (2) and (3) of the Value Added Tax Act 1994 provide in so far as relevant
"(1) The amount of input tax for which a taxable person is entitled to a credit at the end of any period shall be so much of the input tax for the period … as is allowable by or under regulations as being attributable to supplies within subsection (2) below.
(2) The supplies within this subsection are the following made or to be made by the taxable person in the course or furtherance of his business–
taxable supplies …
(3) The Commissioners shall make regulations for securing a fair and reasonable attribution of input tax to supplies within subsection (2) above …"
The relevant regulations for the attribution input tax to taxable supplies for the purposes of this appeal are regulations 101, which sets out the standard method, and 102 of the Value Added Tax Regulations 1995. In so far as relevant these provide as follows:
"101–(1) Subject to regulation 102, the amount of input tax which a person shall be entitled to deduct provisionally shall be that amount which is attributable to taxable supplies in accordance with this regulation…
102–(1) … the Commissioners may approve or direct the use by a taxable person of a method other than that specified in regulation 101 …
(3) A taxable person using a method as approved or directed to be used by the Commissioners under paragraph (1) above shall continue to use that method unless the Commissioners approve or direct the termination of its use."
The principal submissions of the parties
a. Mr Cunningham's evidence was, as we have accepted, that he believed that this expenditure was treated as exempt under the 1996 Letter and that the position remained the same under the 2001 letter;
b. The use of the expression "Homes repairs" input tax is not apt to cover such items as sale of food or telephone calls: this expression is easily understood by Sue Ryder Care to cover the expenditure accounted for by central headquarters for centrally administered major project expenditure on the Homes;
c. The Commissioners offered to amend the terms of the 2001 Letter: this must imply that they thought the letter deficient.
d. The 1996 Letter, with its example that general expenses of running the Homes should be treated as exempt, did not permit any apportionment of input VAT on this expenditure.
e. The only purpose of the second letter was to deal with the treatment of non business expenditure and income (i.e. donations, legacies etc): such little evidence as there is prior to the signing of the 2001 Letter refers only to this topic and none refers to the reasons why the examples in paragraphs (b) and (c) of the 1996 Letter are not repeated in the 2001 letter. These deletions are, therefore, to be assumed not to intend any change from the 1996 letter.
Our Conclusions and the Reasons for them
a. The examples that were in the 1996 Letter are deleted from the 2001 Letter. Whatever the purpose of those examples in the 1996 Letter, we now have the April 2001 Letter as the operative document setting out the special method. This can and should stand on its own. Particularly is this the case when we have no direct evidence from either party from the people who must be assumed to have decided what should go into the 2001 Letter and, therefore, as to what they intended by the deletion of the examples;
b. We would normally expect an agreed standard method as intended to cover all residual input tax with, where appropriate, express provisions to cover any relevant categories to be treated differently;
c. While we have accepted Mr Cunningham's evidence that he believed that the relevant expenditure at the Homes was exempt, we are not satisfied that he was involved to any significant extent in the negotiation of the terms of the 2001 Letter. His views as to what it was intended to effect are, therefore, only of marginal relevance;
d. While the expression "Homes repairs" is not apt, or at any rate not the best that could be used, to cover all the relevant residual expenditure, it is in our view clearly intended as some sort of shorthand. It is reasonable to apportion this expenditure incurred at the Homes in the way that that category is to be apportioned under the 2001 Letter: that apportionment is in proportion to the categories of income in furtherance of which this residual expenditure was incurred;
e. The 2001 Letter expressly states that it covers "any" residual input tax. We construe "any" to mean all;
f. We are not impressed by the argument that the Commissioners have offered to amend the terms of the 2001 Letter and that, therefore it must be deficient. It must have become clear to the Commissioners that the wording had caused confusion. It makes a lot of sense to amend it to remove any possibility of this confusion continuing. But that leaves open what is the proper construction of the letter as it stands; and
g. Apportioning the relevant input tax on the relevant expenditure as "Home repairs" means that it is apportioned by reference to the income of the Homes where it is spent. Apportionment in accordance with the method proposed by Mr Jordan would take into account the large amounts of taxable income generated by the Shops. Apportionment by the first of these two alternatives seems entirely reasonable.
MALCOLM J F PALMER
CHAIRMAN
RELEASED: 29 October 2004
LON/03/1035