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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions >> Royal Bank of Canada Trust Corporation Ltd v Revenue & Customs [2008] UKVAT V20520 (04 January 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2008/V20520.html Cite as: [2008] UKVAT V20520 |
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20520
INPUT TAX – Appellant operated as an Enterprise Zone Property Unit Trust – Appellant claimed VAT as input tax on supplies made after it ceased to make taxable supplies – Appellant contended that the disputed supplies were cost components of its letting business – satisfied on the facts that no direct and immediate link between the disputed supplies and Appellant's taxable business – in the alternative disputed supplies were costs of issuing the units – no evidence to support alternative argument – in the alternative breached the principle of neutrality – no breach of principle – Appeal dismissed
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE
ROYAL BANK OF CANADA TRUST CORPORATION LIMITED Appellant
(AS TRUSTEE OF THE MATRIX DUDLEY TRUST)
- and -
HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE and CUSTOMS Respondents
Tribunal: MICHAEL TILDESLEY OBE (Chairman)
Sitting in public in London on 15 October 2007
John Watson, Ashurst solicitors, for the Appellant
Andrew McNab, counsel instructed by the Solicitor for HM Revenue & Customs, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2007
DECISION
The Appeal
The Dispute
(1) The cost of the supplies after 23 May 2006 was a cost of the Appellant's business of letting an enterprise zone property as an EZPUT.
(2) The Appellant's retention of the reversionary interest was an inevitable cost of having financed its business through the issue of units to tax based investors. Accordingly the cost of retaining the reversion was attributable to the raising of that finance and to the actual taxable supplies made in consequence of it.
(3) The Respondents' refusal of the Appellant's claim for input tax breached the principle of neutrality which was the foundation of Value Added Tax.
The Evidence
The Facts
(1) A balancing charge might occur if the property was sold within 25 years of its first commercial use.
(2) If, however, the Appellant disposed of a lesser interest, a balancing charge would only arise if that lesser interest was granted within seven years of acquisition.
Reasons for Decision
First Argument: The expenses incurred after the grant of the long lease were a cost of the Appellant's business of letting an enterprise zone property as an EZPUT.
The Parties' Representations
(1) The retention of the reversion in the property and the incurring of consequential costs were part of the Appellant's economic activity as defined in Article 4(2) of the Sixth Directive so that the Appellant remained a taxable person for the purpose of that directive.
(2) The costs were an overhead of the Appellant's business so that there was a direct and immediate link with the immediate activity.
(3) There were no fraudulent or abusive circumstances.
(4) Any interest received on the cash retained was incidental to the making of the taxable supplies within the meaning of Article 19 of the Sixth Directive and so fell to be ignored.
(5) Thus the VAT on the expenses was recoverable by the Appellant as input tax.
(1) The deduction system is designed to relieve the trader entirely of the burden of the VAT payable in the course of all his economic activities provided that such activities are themselves, in principle, subject to VAT (the neutrality principle).
(2) There must be a clear nexus between the expenditure and the business itself.
(3) The expenditure must have a direct and immediate link with the taxable transactions of the business. The test of direct and immediate link is an objective one, the ultimate aim pursued by the taxable person is irrelevant.
(4) In principle the existence of a direct and immediate link between a particular input transaction (expenditure) and a particular output transaction (taxable supply of the business) is a necessary pre-condition for the deduction of VAT incurred on the input transaction.
(5) The costs of the input transaction form part of the cost components of the output transaction. Thus the costs must generally have arisen before the making of the output transaction.
(6) There is in general no direct and immediate link between expenditure on services obtained in consequence of an output transaction since the expenditure is not incurred as part of the cost components of the output transaction.
(7) An exception to the general principle that the right to deduct depends upon a direct and immediate link is where the costs form part of the taxable person's overheads, and as such are, in principle, cost components of the products of business as a whole.
(8) A further exception to the general principle is that the right to deduct may remain where costs have been incurred in contemplation of making taxable supplies but the economic activity envisaged does not give rise to taxed transactions or the taxable person is unable to use the goods or services acquired by reason of circumstances beyond his control.
(9) A final exception is that the right to deduct may remain on costs incurred in relation to closing down the business even though no further taxable outputs are made.
(1) Fini H was a limited partnership created in 1989 with the object of running a restaurant.
(2) In order to carry out that activity, Fini H leased premises from 20 May 1988. The lease was for a term of 10 years and could be terminated only with effect from 30 September 1998.
(3) Fini H closed the restaurant at the end of 1993. Replacement tenants could not be found and the premises remained unused. Fini H sought to terminate the lease, but the landlord refused consent.
(4) From the end of 1993 to 1998 Fini H remained registered for VAT even though it no longer carried on the restaurant business. It continued to deduct the input tax paid on the rent and related supplies in relation to the lease.
"In the main case, Fini H's obligation owing to a non-termination clause in the lease, to continue paying business rent and charges on a property which it had leased for the purpose of carrying on a restaurant business until the normal expiry of the lease could, in principle, be regarded as being directly and immediately linked to the restaurant business".
"Since Fini H entered into the lease in order to have the premises necessary for carrying on its restaurant business and given that the premises were actually used for that business, it must be conceded that the partnership's obligation to continue paying the rent and other charges after it had ceased that business was a direct consequence of the carrying on of that business" (paragraphs 27 & 28).
Reasons
(1) The Appellant's rationale for the existence of direct and immediate link was expressed in terms of securing the most favourable tax treatment of the investment which was irrelevant as it concerned the ultimate aim pursued by the Appellant and the investors.
(2) The requirement to keep the grant of the long lease separate from the sale of the reversion.
(3) The objective characteristics of the supplies bore no hallmarks of a direct and immediate connection with the Appellant's taxable business of letting properties.
(4) The disputed supplies were not a result of a pre-existing legally enforceable obligation made during the course of its taxable activities.
(5) The supplies were not strictly necessary to complete the winding up of the Appellant's business.
Second Argument: The retention of the reversionary interest was an inevitable cost of it having financed its business through the issue of units to tax based investors?
Parties' Representations
The Reasons
Third Argument: Refusal of Credit would breach the Principle of Neutrality
Parties Representations
Reasons
Decision
MICHAEL TILDESLEY OBE
CHAIRMAN
RELEASE DATE: 4 January 2008
LON 2007/0581
Note 1 See paragraph 29 of the decision in Fini H [Back] Note 2 Sale of lesser interest is the grant of the long lease for 999 years. [Back]