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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 >> Morgan Stanley UK Group v Revenue & Customs [2007] UKVAT V20424 (08 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2007/V20424.html Cite as: [2007] UKVAT V20424 |
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20424
INPUT TAX – Partial exemption – Special method – Three-year cap – Reliance on "caretaker" special method – Caretaker method provided for interim recovery pending agreement of new "permanent" special method with adjustment to be made following such agreement – New special method agreed five years after start of caretaker method – Whether caretaker method was a special method – Yes – Whether claim for input tax more than five years later than prescribed accounting period in which tax became chargeable was capped – Yes – Appeal dismissed – VAT Act 1994 s.26 – VAT Regs 1995/2518 regs 29(1A) and 102(1)
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE
MORGAN STANLEY UK GROUP Appellant
- and –
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS Respondents
Tribunal: SIR STEPHEN OLIVER QC (Chairman)
DIANA WILSON
Sitting in public in London on 16 and 17 October 2007
Alun James, counsel, for the Appellant
Kieron Beal, counsel, instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor for HM Revenue and Customs, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2007
DECISION
"Soon after Morgan Stanley acquired Quilter, HMRC stated in a fax to Morgan Stanley, dated 13 June 2001, that an interim way of recovering input tax should be used prior to agreeing a method and that once a method was agreed, an adjustment could be made. This statement means the beginning of the period of statutory limitation for any subsequent claim should be 13 June 2001 and that Morgan Stanley is entitled to make a retrospective adjustment in respect of the period above."
The law on the first issue
"Regulation 102 provides for the use of methods of attribution other than the standard method. Customs may either approve or direct the use of such an alternative method which, in accordance with the statutory objective under section 26(3), is directed at achieving a fair and reasonable attribution when the standard method does not do so, or at least a fairer and more reasonable attribution than the standard method."
Background facts leading to the disputed claim
"On the point of agreeing a method, I will have to discuss with you the incorporation of the Quilter companies into the Morgan Stanley method from 1 April 2001. I will probably have to visit the Quilter offices to gain some knowledge of their activities and accounting processes in order to do this.
We can, of course, agree an interim way of recovering input tax prior to agreeing a method; then once the method is agreed, an adjustment can be made."
A proper and acceptable special method for the Quilter companies will have to be agreed. For this purpose further information will have to be made available. Pending agreement Morgan Stanley should, as regards the Quilter companies, go on using the old Quilter method. Once a formal method has been agreed an overall adjustment will be made and any advantages or disadvantages to either side that have accrued in the meantime will be put right.
Positions taken by the parties
"… the Commissioners can enter into binding agreements and … they cannot unilaterally resile from those agreements with retrospective effect.
There are three particular points to bear in mind:
- firstly, that a binding agreement need not be in writing. An agreement to use a scheme in a particular way can be implied from the Commissioners' words and actions; it is not possible to list all the ways in which this might happen, but whenever you acquiesce in a retailer departing from a published method it is possible that a binding agreement might be inferred by the courts;
- secondly, if an agreement exists, then any termination of that agreement must be done in an unambiguous way and must be from a current date;
- the third lesson concerns the prioritisation of risk at large businesses subject to cyclical control. … but where the tax at risk is regulated by agreements (such as Retail Schemes or partial exemption) we will be able to assess retrospectively only in the most exceptional cases."
Conclusions
(i) entitled Morgan Stanley to continue using the old Quilter method until an agreement was reached with Customs that determined the appropriate special method (i.e. the new special method) and
(ii) allowed for an adjustment when the new special method was determined and
(iii) absent the three-year cap, permitted the adjustments and consequential payments to Morgan Stanley.
The operation of the three-year cap
"29(1) [Subject to paragraphs (1A) and (2) below], and save as the Commissioners may otherwise allow or direct either generally or specifically, a person claiming deduction of input tax under section 25(2) of the Act shall do so on a return made by him for the prescribed accounting period in which the VAT became chargeable.
[(1A) The Commissioners shall not allow or direct a person to make any claim for deduction of input tax in terms such that the deduction would fall to be claimed more than three years after the date by which the return for the prescribed accounting period in which the VAT became chargeable is required to be made.]"
"This voluntary disclosure is in addition to the claim made for the period 1 November 2002 to 31 October 2005".
"Regulation [108] applies where a credit has been given for input tax in respect of a supply which has been attributed to "an intended taxable supply" and where within six years such supply is used or appropriated for use in making an exempt supply. Regulation [109] deals with the converse situation, where input tax has been incurred in respect of a supply which is attributed to an intended exempt supply (or to the carrying on of activities other than the making of taxable supplies), and within the six years the supply is used or appropriated for use in making a taxable supply, before the intended exempt supply is made or the intended activities carried on. In such a case the Commissioners must pay to the taxable person a sum representing the amount attributable to the taxable supply."
SIR STEPHEN OLIVER QC
CHAIRMAN
RELEASED: 8 November 2007
LON 2006/0549