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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Trennery v HM Inspector of Taxes [2003] EWCA Civ 1792 (18 December 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1792.html Cite as: [2004] STI 51, [2004] STC 170, [2003] EWCA Civ 1792, [2004] BTC 3 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION (Mr Justice Peter Smith)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
and
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
____________________
Stephen Graham Trennery |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Graham West (HM Inspector of Taxes) and related appeals |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Christopher McCall QC and Mr Michael Gibbon (instructed by The Solicitor of Inland Revenue) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker :
INTRODUCTION
"The essence of a flip-flop scheme is that an asset pregnant with a gain is transferred to the First Settlement in which the settlor is a beneficiary on a hold-over election; cash is borrowed by the trustees on the security of the asset and the cash is advanced to the Second Settlement in which the settlor is interested; the settlor is then cut out from being a beneficiary under the First Settlement, leaving other beneficiaries with an interest in possession; and in the following tax year the asset is disposed of from the First Settlement. It is hoped that the rate of capital gains tax in the First Settlement is only (at the time) 25 per cent, rather than the 40 per cent that would have applied to the settlor or the First Settlement if the settlor had still been a beneficiary. The scheme was legislated against in section 92 of and Schedule 26 to the Finance Act 2000."
THE AGREED FACTS
THE RELEVANT PROVISIONS OF THE 1992 ACT
"77. Charge on settlor with interest in settlement
(1) Where in a year of assessment –
(a) chargeable gains accrue to the trustees of a settlement from the disposal of any or all of the settled property,
(b) after making any deduction provided for by section 2(2) in respect of disposals of the settled property there remains an amount on which the trustees would, disregarding section 3, be chargeable to tax for the year in respect of those gains, and
(c) at any time during the year the settlor has an interest in the settlement,
the trustees shall not be chargeable to tax in respect of those [sic] but instead chargeable gains of an amount equal to that referred to in paragraph (b) shall be treated as accruing to the settlor in that year.
(2) Subject to the following provisions of this section, a settlor shall be regarded as having an interest in a settlement if –
(a) any property which may at any time be comprised in the settlement, or any derived property is, or will or may become, payable to or applicable for the benefit of the settlor or his spouse in any circumstances whatsoever, or
(b) the settlor or his spouse enjoys a benefit deriving directly or indirectly from any property which is comprised in the settlement or any derived property.
....
(8) In this section "derived property", in relation to any property, means income from that property or any other property directly or indirectly representing proceeds of, or of income from, that property or income therefrom.
78. Right of recovery
(1) Where any tax becomes chargeable on and is paid by a person in respect of gains treated as accruing to him under section 77 he shall be entitled –
(a) to recover the amount of the tax from any trustee of the settlement, ....
....
79. Provisions supplemental to [section 77] ...
(1) For the purposes of this section and [section 77] .... a person is a settlor in relation to a settlement if the settled property consists of or includes property originating from him.
(2) In this section and [section 77] .... –
(a) references to settled property (and to property comprised in a settlement), in relation to any settlor, are references only to property originating from that settlor, ....
(b) ....
(3) References in this section to property originating from a settlor are references to –
(a) property which that settlor has provided directly or indirectly for the purposes of the settlement,
(b) property representing that property, and
(c) ....
(4) ....
(5) In subsection (3)
(a) ....
(b) references to property which represents other property include references to property which represents accumulated income from that other property.
(6) to (8) ...."
THE SPECIAL COMMISSIONERS' DECISION
"12. Section 77 was first introduced in 1988 at the time when capital gains tax was first charged at the individual's marginal rate of tax rather than at a flat rate. It was amended in the Finance Act 1995 at the same time as the income tax "settlement" provisions were redrafted. The revised income tax provision in section 660A of the Taxes Act 1988 contains the identical definition of "derived property" to the one introduced for capital gains tax in 1995. In income tax it has applied since section 28 of the Finance Act 1946 where the words which now comprise the definition of derived property were contained in the section. The changes to the operative parts of the section can be seen from the comparison below.
Original version | As amended by the Finance Act 1995 |
(1) Subject to subsections (6), (7) and (8) below, subsection (2) below applies where— in a year of assessment chargeable gains accrue to the trustees of a settlement from the disposal of any or all of the settled property, after making any deductions provided for by section 2(2) in respect of disposals of the settled property there remains an amount on which the trustees would, disregarding section 3 (and apart from this section), be chargeable to tax for the year in respect of those gains, and at any time during the year the settlor has an interest in the settlement. [Diagram or picture not reproduced in HTML version - see original .rtf file to view diagram or picture] (2) Where this subsection applies, the trustees shall not be chargeable to tax in respect of the gains concerned but instead chargeable gains of an amount equal to that referred to in subsection (1)(b) above shall be treated as accruing to the settlor in the year. (3) Subject to subsections (4) and (5) below, for the purposes of subsection (1)(c) above a settlor has an interest in a settlement if— [Diagram or picture not reproduced in HTML version - see original .rtf file to view diagram or picture]any property which may at any time be comprised in the settlement or any income which may arise under the settlement is, or will or may become, applicable for the benefit of or payable to the settlor or the spouse of the settlor in any circumstances whatsoever, or the settlor, or the spouse of the settlor, enjoys a benefit deriving directly or indirectly from any property which is comprised in the settlement or any income arising under the settlement. [Diagram or picture not reproduced in HTML version - see original .rtf file to view diagram or picture] |
(1) Where in a year of assessment— chargeable gains accrue to the trustees of a settlement from the disposal of any or all of the settled property, after making any deductions provided for by section 2(2) in respect of disposals of the settled property there remains an amount on which the trustees would, disregarding section 3 (and apart from this section), be chargeable to tax for the year in respect of those gains, and at any time during the year the settlor has an interest in the settlement, the trustees shall not be chargeable to tax in respect of those but instead chargeable gains of an amount equal to that referred to in paragraph (b) shall be treated as accruing to the settlor in that year. (2) Subject to the following provisions of this section, a settlor shall be regarded as having an interest in a settlement if— (a) any property which may at any time be comprised in the settlement, or any derived property is, or will or may become, payable to or applicable for the benefit of the settlor or his spouse in any circumstances whatsoever, or (b) the settlor or his spouse enjoys a benefit deriving directly or indirectly from any property which is comprised in the settlement or any derived property. … (8) In this section "derived property", in relation to any property, means income from that property or any other property directly or indirectly representing proceeds of, or of income from, that property or income therefrom. |
13. Mr McCall QC contended that as this was an anti-avoidance provision it should not only be given a purposive construction but also wide phrases should be given wide meanings on the lines of Lord Reid's approach in Greenberg v IRC [1972] AC 109 at 137. Mr Ewart contends that this is not anti-avoidance legislation on a par with section 703 of the Taxes Act 1988 but legislation designed to charge capital gains tax at the settlor's marginal rate in circumstances where this is obviously the correct rate. On this point we agree with Mr Ewart and see no reason why the section should be given anything other than a normal purposive construction and that we should not strive to give wide meanings to phrases in it. In particular, as Lord Hoffmann said in Macniven v Westmoreland [2001] WLR 337 at 397B quoting from his speech in another case, "If [tax avoidance schemes] do not work, the reason…is simply that upon the true construction of the statute, the transaction which was designed to avoid the charge to tax actually comes within it. It is not that the statute has a penumbral spirit which strikes down devices or stratagems designed to avoid its terms or exploit its loopholes."
14. The crucial provision for determining whether the section applies is subsection (2):
"Subject to the following provisions of this section, a settlor shall be regarded as having an interest in a settlement if
(a) any property which may at any time be comprised in the settlement, or any derived property is, or will or may become, payable to or applicable for the benefit of the settlor or his spouse in any circumstances whatsoever, or
(b) the settlor or his spouse enjoys a benefit deriving directly or indirectly from any property which is comprised in the settlement or any derived property."
15. We consider that "at any time" in paragraph (a) means at a particular time. We do not think this was disputed, although Mr McCall may not have accepted it.
16. The definition of "derived property" is:
(8) In this section "derived property", in relation to any property, means income from that property or any other property directly or indirectly representing proceeds of, or of income from, that property or income therefrom.
17. There was agreement between the parties that the definition of derived property should be expanded as follows: Derived property in relation to any property means (i) income from that property; (ii) any other property directly or indirectly representing proceeds of that property; (iii) any income from (ii); (iv) any other property directly or indirectly representing proceeds of income from that property; and (v) any income from (iv).
18. Combining subsections (2) and (8) the question is whether:
1. any property which may at [a particular] time be comprised in the settlement is or will or may become payable to or applicable for the benefit of the settlor or his spouse;
2. (i) income from any property at [that] time comprised in the settlement; (ii) any other property directly or indirectly representing proceeds of any property at [that] time comprised in the settlement; (iii) any income from (ii); (iv) any other property directly or indirectly representing proceeds of income from any property at [that] time be comprised in the settlement; or (v) any income from (iv)—is or will or may become payable to or applicable for the benefit of the settlor or his spouse;
3. the settlor or his spouse enjoys a benefit deriving directly or indirectly from any property which is comprised in the settlement; or
4. the settlor or his spouse enjoys a benefit deriving directly or indirectly from (i) income from any property which is comprised in the settlement; (ii) any other property directly or indirectly representing proceeds of any property which is comprised in the settlement; (iii) any income from (ii); (iv) any other property directly or indirectly representing proceeds of income from any property which is comprised in the settlement; or (v) any income from (iv).
19. Mr McCall QC [for the Revenue] contends that since all property comprised in the settlement is included in Nos.1 and 3, Nos.2 and 4, being derived property, must include property outside the settlement, and hence must include the cash advanced to the Second Settlement in which the settlor is clearly interested. He limits this to cases where there is a connection between the property outside the settlement and the property comprised in the settlement, for example freehold comprised in the settlement and a lease (on beneficial terms) held outside the settlement, or, as in this case, there is cash outside the settlement representing a borrowing secured on assets in the settlement. The freehold and leasehold example then gives the same result as the settlor having a licence to occupy property in the settlement. The connection disappears when the first property ceases to be comprised in the settlement or the borrowing ceases to be secured on assets in the settlement.
20. Mr Ewart [for the taxpayers] contends that the natural meaning of the words comprising the definition of derived property is limited to property comprised in the settlement and income therefrom. He suggests that the definition is needed to catch the case of a settlor who had no interest in property comprised in the settlement today, for example a house, but who could benefit from the proceeds of sale of the property. In relation to the freehold and leasehold example, granting the lease to the settlor on favourable terms is clearly a benefit to the settlor but thereafter the leasehold is a separate item of property and not derived property from the freehold in the settlement. He also contends that including property outside the settlement was a major change which one would not expect to find made in a redrafting of the section contained in a Schedule to the Finance Act 1995 headed "Consequential Amendments of Other Enactments". Mr McCall answers this by saying that property outside the settlement was already caught by the benefit obtained indirectly in No.4 of the combined wording above. Mr Ewart replies that a benefit from the Second Settlement does not derive, even indirectly from property in the First Settlement.
21. We prefer Mr Ewart's construction as being the more natural use of language. The effect of the definition of derived property in No.2 above is to catch the possibility of the settlor benefiting from (i) income of the property now comprised in the settlement; (ii) the proceeds of (meaning something representing) the property now comprised in the settlement; (iii) the income of (ii); (iv) the proceeds of that income; (v) the income of (iv). In other words, one starts with the property in the settlement now and adds income and property representing that property or income, and income from that, so that all property derived from the present settled property is caught. Similarly, No.4 above looks at benefits enjoyed (directly or indirectly) from the property in the settlement now and from all property derived from that property. We believe that there is a clear statutory purpose in catching benefits from all such property. The previous version of section 77 only caught benefits from the property now comprised in the settlement and its income, so that it would not catch benefits that could be obtained only from the proceeds the property now comprised in the settlement or from the income of the proceeds of that property. The income tax provisions have since 1946 caught the possibility of benefiting from all such derived property. Section 28(2) of the Finance Act 1946 provides:
"the settlor shall not be deemed for the purposes of this section to have divested himself absolutely of any property if that property or any income therefrom or any property directly or indirectly representing proceeds of, or of income from, that property or any income therefrom is, or will or may become, payable to him or applicable for his benefit in any circumstances whatsoever….."
22.This has the same content as the defined expression derived property. Bringing the capital gains tax provision into line with the redrafted income tax provision still effectively containing these words through the definition of derived property could properly be described as a consequential amendment.
23. Mr McCall's construction, so far as concerns property outside the settlement, requires a connection to be found for the time being between the settled property and property outside the settlement. In this case he contends that the cash in the Second Settlement is derived property only so long as the borrowing is charged on assets in the First Settlement. When the borrowing is discharged, on his construction the derivation ceases. He founds this construction in the words "'derived property' in relation to any property means…." so that the property is derived only so long as the relationship subsists. We consider that his construction strains the language of the section and Mr Ewart's construction is more natural and is fully in accordance with the statutory purpose. On this point accordingly we find in favour of the taxpayer."
THE JUDGMENT OF PETER SMITH J
"I derive no assistance from comparison with the old section or these notes [a reference to notes provided by the Board of Inland Revenue in relation to the 1995 Finance Bill] and the reference to section 660A [of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988]. It seems to me that I should simply approach section 77 .... and see what it means and decide on that meaning whether or not the settlors retain an interest for the purposes of that section."
".... whether or not the settlors at the time of the sale of the shares still retained an interest in their respective First Settlements."
" 28. As set out above section 77 (2) TGA provides that a settlor shall be regarded as having an interest in a settlement if (a) any property which may at any time be comprised in the settlement or any derived property is or will or may become payable to or applicable for the benefit of the settlor or his spouse in any circumstances whatsoever, or (b) the settlor or his spouse enjoys a benefit deriving directly or indirectly from any property which is comprised in the settlement or any derived property.
29. The key provision is subsection (8) which is set out earlier and which gives a definition of derived property as follows:-
""derived property" in relation to any property means income from that property or any other property directly or indirectly representing proceeds of or of income from that property or income there from."
30. Mr McCall QC submits that the fund comprised in any Second Settlement having been created by funds raised by virtue of the loan made by the Trustees of the First Settlement and paid over to the Trustees of the Second Settlement is derived property and the benefits under the Second Settlement are derived benefits. Mr McCall QC submits that case falls within both S. 77(2) (a) and (b) although he submits rightly that either will be sufficient for the purposes of the Appellant's claim.
31. Mr McCall QC submits that the expression "derived property" is designed to cover property outside the settlement so long as there is any property within the settlement in respect of which it can be said the property outside the settlement is "any other property directly or indirectly representing proceeds of, or income from, that property or income therefrom".
32. Mr Ewart for the taxpayers submitted (successfully to the Special Commissioners) that any derived property must be found within the settlement and the income therefrom.
33. The Special Commissioners considered that Mr Ewart's construction was a more natural use of the language.
34. Mr McCall QC accepts there must be some limit in point of time to the treatment of property outside the First Settlement as "derived property", and that limit he submits is that there must at any given time for capital gains purposes still be property within the settlement from which it can be said the derived property (to use a different word) comes. He points to the wide definition of derived property and says that if one looks at the sums that were raised by borrowing on the security of the shares how can it not be said that the proceeds thereby raised are "any other property directly or indirectly representing proceeds of that property…".
35. With deference to the Special Commissioners I agree with the submissions of Mr McCall QC. The very wide wording is to catch any property, which is directly, or indirectly representing proceeds of property comprised in the settlement. I do not see how the monies that were raised by the loan can be said to be any thing other than indirectly derived from the utilisation of the shares for the purposes of realising that sum. As Mr McCall QC said in argument re-mortgaging a property is regarded as a classic way of raising capital out of assets. That is what the Trustees of the First Settlements did and those funds were transferred to the Second Settlements in which the settlors still retain benefits.
36. It also to my mind marries with the wording in the two subsections which refer to "any property which may at any time be comprised in the settlement, or any derived property" (emphasis added). That seems to me to show that the draftsman of the section intended that there would be property in the settlement and derived property would be found outside the settlement. Mr Ewart's argument involves a submission that the derived property is within the settlement and I do not see how that can survive the wording of those two provisions.
37. That seems to me to make sense. The provision is designed to ensure that a settlor remains liable for capital gains if he retains a benefit in whatever way in property which is either in a settlement or derived from the settlement at the time of the disposal of the property comprised in the settlement.
38. Whether or not this has an impact on section 660A ICTA is something which is not of concern for me. The wording of section 77 TGA is clear in my opinion. If Mr Ewart's arguments are correct, the creation of the structure involving derived property would be surplus. I say that because any property which was still within the settlement cannot be derived property, as it would be property within the settlement. The other side to the coin to that is Mr Ewart's inability to deal with the question I posed to him "from what source did the funds for the Second Settlement come?". It seems to me to be evident that the funds were derived from property which is still in the settlement and the assessments were for this reason alone properly raised."
THE ARGUMENTS IN THIS COURT
(a) if there is any potential future benefit to the settlor or his spouse from property which may be 'derived property' in respect of any of that property (including in particular property 'directly or indirectly representing proceeds' of any of that property); or
(b) if there is any actual benefit to either of them 'deriving directly or indirectly from' any of the property for the time being comprised in the settlement.
CONCLUSIONS
1. income from the Source Property (which includes property 'originating from' the settlor, and any property 'representing' that property: see paragraph 46 above);
2. any other property directly or indirectly 'representing proceeds' of the Source Property;
3. income from 2;
4. any other property directly or indirectly 'representing proceeds' of income from the Source Property; and
5. income from 4.
RESULT
Lord Justice Longmore:
Lord Justice Kennedy: