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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 >> New Angel Court Ltd v HM Inspector of Taxes [2004] EWCA Civ 242 (16 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/242.html Cite as: [2004] NPC 45, [2004] STI 892, [2004] EWCA Civ 242, [2004] WLR 1988, [2004] 1 WLR 1988, [2004] STC 779 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION (Mr Justice Lawrence Collins)
CH 2003 APP 0053
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAY
and
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
____________________
New Angel Court Ltd |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Danny Adam (HM Inspector of Taxes) |
Respondent |
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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 Philip Jones (instructed by the Solicitor of Inland Revenue) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker :
INTRODUCTION
THE FACTUAL BACKGROUND
THE RELEVANT STATUTORY PROVISIONS
"161 Appropriations from stock
(1) Subject to subsection (3) below, where an asset acquired by a person otherwise than as trading stock of a trade carried on by him is appropriated by him for the purposes of the trade as trading stock (whether on the commencement of the trade or otherwise) and, if he had then sold the asset for its market value, a chargeable gain or allowable loss would have accrued to him, he shall be treated as having thereby disposed of the asset by selling it for its then market value.
(2) .
(3) . subsection (1) shall not apply in relation to a person's appropriation of an asset for the purposes of a trade if he is chargeable to income tax in respect of the profits of the trade under Case 1 of Schedule D, and elects that instead the market value of the asset at the time of the appropriation shall, in computing the profits of the trade for the purposes of tax, be treated as reduced by the amount of the chargeable gain or increased by the amount of the allowable loss referred to in subsection (1), and where that subsection does not apply by reason of such an election, the profits of the trade shall be computed accordingly.
.
173 Transfers within a group: trading stock
(1) Where a member of a group of companies acquires an asset as trading stock from any other member of the group, and the asset did not form part of the trading stock of any trade carried on by the other member, the member acquiring it shall be treated for the purposes of section 161 as having acquired the asset otherwise than as trading stock and immediately appropriated it for the purposes of the trade as trading stock.
(2) .
288 Interpretation
(1) .
'trading stock' has the meaning given by section 100(2) of the [Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988]
.
"(2) . 'trading stock', in relation to any trade
(a) means property of any description, whether real or personal, being either
(i) property such as is sold in the ordinary course of the trade ."
"My Lords, the theoretical independent existence of every corporation enables a group of companies to escape liability at common law for the losses of an individual member of the group: see In re Southard & Co Ltd [1979] 1 WLR 1198, 1208. The theoretical independent existence of every corporation inspired a tax avoidance industry which has only partly been brought under control by the principles summarised by my noble and learned friend, Lord Brightman, in Furniss v. Dawson [1984] AC 474, 527. Nevertheless, the legislature recognising for the purposes of inflicting tax that group companies do not lead an independent existence has invented group relief which enables a group of companies to shuffle its losses between members of the group to obtain a tax advantage. The legislature has not extended group relief to allowable losses, but has conferred on a group of companies power to convert an allowable loss into a trading loss which can then be shuffled to secure a tax advantage. The Inland Revenue cannot complain that [the group has] secured a fiscal advantage by the statutory method presented by section 274 of the [Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1970] and paragraph 1 of Schedule 7 to the [Finance Act 1965]. The only requirement in these circumstances is that, apart from section 274 considerations, there must be an acquisition by a trading company 'as trading stock'."
THE ISSUE
THE AUTHORITIES
"The conversion of a potential capital loss into a trading loss for corporation tax purposes and the distribution of the benefit of that loss by way of group relief cannot however by achieved unless an asset is transferred from a non-trading member of the group to a trading member and is acquired by the trading member as "trading stock" of the business carried on by the trading member. If this were not the case the practical distinction between chargeable gains and profits for the purposes of the calculation of corporation tax could be largely eliminated by including at least one trading company in a group. The extent to which such a distinction is desirable is not a matter for present discussion. For the conversion of a capital loss into a trading loss it must be shown that a capital asset has been appropriated as trading stock .
In my opinion Arndale never decided to acquire, and never did acquire, the lease as trading stock. The group's advisers procured the transfer of the lease from SPI to Arndale and from Arndale to APTL with the object of obtaining group relief of £2.2M trading loss without in fact changing the lease from a capital asset to a trading asset. The group seeks the advantage of treating the lease as trading stock while ensuring that the group retains the lease as a capital asset at all times. Arndale followed instructions and lent to the transaction its name and its description as a property-dealing company. Arndale did not trade and never had any intention of trading with the lease. In order to give the whole transaction a faint air of commercial verisimilitude, the trading company Arndale was awarded the modest sum of £10,000 for entering into two assignments of property worth over £3M. The award of £10,000 was ostensibly made at the expense of APTL which paid Arndale for the lease £10,000 more than the price paid by Arndale to SPI. In reality the award of £10,000 was made at the expense of SPI which sold for £10,000 less than the market value assessed by the group. The profit of £10,000 did not represent the difference between the price at which Arndale negotiated the purchase and the price at which Arndale negotiated the sale. The profit of £10,000 did not represent the difference between the value of the lease to SPI and the value of the lease to APTL. The profit of £10,000 was a timid veil designed to conceal the fact that the lease was not being traded. Moreover, all three companies being wholly owned subsidiaries of the same parent, the £10,000 was a book entry which had no material effect on the overall financial position of the group.
I conclude therefore that, while Arndale acquired the lease, it did not acquire the lease as "trading stock" within section 274(1) of the Act of 1970 and therefore was never in a position to exercise the election provided by paragraph 1(3) of Schedule 7 to the Act of 1965. In these circumstances it is unnecessary to consider the application of the principles enunciated by your Lordships' House in IRC v. Burmah Oil Co Ltd [1982] STC 30 and Furniss v. Dawson [1984] AC 474 to a case where the legislature has made express provision for the mitigation of tax by the conversion of a capital loss into a trading loss provided certain conditions are fulfilled. It is also unnecessary to consider whether the dividend-stripping cases since 1963 have finally stripped the decision in Griffiths v. J P Harrison (Watford) Ltd [1963] AC 1 of its value to the tax-avoider. In the present case the legislature has expressly provided a method of tax mitigation designed no doubt to ensure that a group of companies is in no worse position than an individual whose activities embrace all the activities of a group of companies. The taxing statutes allow a potential capital loss to be converted into a trading loss in respect of an asset which becomes part of the stock-in-trade of the trading activities of the group. The lease never became part of the trading assets of any company in the group. The Court of Appeal reached the same conclusion and the appeal must be dismissed."
"The assignments of the lease had no commercial justification and only transferred a capital asset from the first member of the group to the third member of the group via the second member of the group in order to convert group capital into income temporarily; on a true analysis the taxpayer did not trade at all."
"The Court of Appeal . by a majority affirmed the order of Walton J. The members of the Court of Appeal were, however, unanimously of the view that the property could only be acquired "as trading stock" if it was acquired for the purpose of being used in the course of trade.
I agree. If a company is to acquire an asset as trading stock, the asset must not only be of a kind which is sold in the ordinary course of the company's trade but must also be acquired for the purposes of that trade with a view to resale at a profit. A company which acquired an asset for purposes other than trading would not, in my opinion, acquire the asset as trading stock even though the company habitually traded in similar assets. Thus, in Arndale's case, the Arndale company traded in property and acquired a lease. By a contemporaneous and pre-arranged sale, the Arndale company transferred the lease to another company in the same group. The object of these manoeuvres was to obtain the benefit of section 274, which applies to property acquired as trading stock, while ensuring at the same time that the lease was never in fact traded. ."
"In a dividend-stripping case, such as Lupton's case, an artificial loss is artificially created and the artificial transaction does not constitute trading but constitutes the manufacture of a tax advantage. In the present case [the group] sustained a real loss."
" . conclude that no reasonable tribunal, properly instructed, could have decided, on the evidence, that the property was acquired by Nova 'as trading stock'. . Nova was a trading company. It bought property of a kind in which it was authorised to deal. . Before deciding to buy the board of Nova considered what, in ordinary commercial terms, was the profit which Nova was likely to make on the transaction."
"Different considerations apply, however, to the Medaillon shares. . The shares were worthless. There was no commercial justification for the acquisition of the shares by Nova. There was no conceivable reason, apart from section 274, why the shares should change hands at all. In my opinion no reasonable tribunal could have concluded that the shares were acquired by Nova as trading stock. .
The shares were not commercially saleable at any price. Nova only acquired the right to share certificates which represented nothing in view of the insolvency of Medaillon and the right to be the latest and last entry in the register of a defunct company."
"In Reed v. Nova Securities the taxpayer claimed to have acquired certain shares and book debts as trading stock and to have made deductible losses for corporation tax purposes. The taxpayer was a trading company and there was some commercial justification for the acquisition of the book debts at the price paid by the company. The commissioners held that the company had acquired the book debts as trading stock. This House refused to interfere with that finding. The shares were however worthless and there was no commercial justification for their purchase. The shares were therefore not trading stock and the decision of the commissioners was therefore reversed. There was a tax avoidance motive in both transactions. This did not prevent the taxpayer from claiming and proving that the book debts had been acquired and disposed of as trading stock."
"Once it is accepted, as [counsel for the taxpayer] did accept, that for a transaction to constitute trading it is necessary for there to be a commercial purpose, it necessarily follows that it is relevant to consider whether the transaction had some purpose other than commerce. If, essentially, the transaction is of a commercial nature and there is a genuine commercial purpose, the presence of a collateral purpose to obtain a tax advantage does not "denature" what is essentially a commercial transaction . If, on the other hand, the sole (and I emphasis sole) purpose of the transaction is to obtain a fiscal advantage, it is logically impossible to postulate the existence of any commercial purpose.
In my judgment, that is the explanation of the House of Lords' decisions in Lupton and Coates v. Arndale . In both cases the sole objective was to obtain a fiscal advantage and that is not a commercial purpose. So in Reed v. Nova Securities . the House of Lords drew a distinction between two types of transaction. In the case of one, the bank debts, the company could have had a commercial purpose and therefore the House of Lords did not disturb the finding of the commissioners that it was a trading transaction notwithstanding the undoubted fact that the transaction also had the purpose of obtaining a fiscal advantage. The other transaction, the shares, had no possible commercial purpose therefore the House of Lords held that the only possible conclusion was that they had not been acquired as trading stock."
"On my reading of the authorities the purpose with which transactions are carried out is always relevant in order to determine whether the transactions have a commercial purpose. If there is a genuine commercial purpose in carrying out the transactions but also an ulterior purpose it will be a question of fact and degree for the commissioners to determine whether essentially they were or were not commercial transactions. In such a case it is not correct, as a matter of law, to conclude that the existence of the ulterior purpose whether fiscal or not, requires a finding that the transactions were not commercial. Only where the commissioners find that the sole purpose of the transaction is ulterior and not commercial can it rightly be said that, as a matter of law, the transaction cannot be [sic] a trading purpose. ."
"When, as in the present case, there are a number of associated companies, is the relevant purpose that of the individual company (the taxpayer company) viewed in isolation or the purpose of the group as a whole? Is the whole scheme to be looked at or only that part of it in which the taxpayer company is a direct participant? The point is of significance in the present case since [counsel for the taxpayer] submitted that, so far as the taxpayer company alone was concerned, there was no fiscal advantage to it in the loan transaction and the taxpayer company undoubtedly received the interest differential which was a benefit to it. The tax advantage aimed for only accrued to the group as a whole by enabling the taxpayer company's losses on currency to be set against group profits. I have no doubt that in such a case regard has to be had both to the overall fiscal purpose of the group and the impact of its implementation on the group. In Coates v. Arndale . the taxpayer dealer company bought property at market value and sold at a small profit: viewed in isolation, therefore, it was dealing in property with a view to profit, a trading transaction. Yet the House of Lords held that the taxpayer company did not acquire the property as trading stock because the transaction was only entered into as part of the tax scheme of the whole group: the purpose was that of the group and the advantage accrued to the group. In Lupton . Viscount Dilhorne, at p.657, looked at the transaction 'viewed as a whole', i.e. not simply at the specific transactions in question: see also per Lord Simon of Glaisdale, at p.660. ."
" if the commissioners find as a fact that the sole object of the transaction was fiscal advantage, that finding can in law only lead to one conclusion, viz. that it was not a trading transaction. Since a fiscal advantage was the sole purpose there is no place for there being a commercial purpose; . if the commissioners find as a fact only that the paramount intention was fiscal advantage, as a matter of law that is not decisive since it postulates the existence of some other purpose, albeit not paramount, which may be commercial. In such a case, the commissioners have to weigh the paramount fiscal intention against the non-fiscal elements and decide as a question of fact whether in essence the transaction constitutes trading for commercial purposes."
"To summarise my views on the law in this case the position, in my judgment, is as follows. (1) Whether a transaction is to be classified as commercial normally falls to be determined objectively by reference to the nature of the transaction itself, i.e. is it a transaction of a kind similar to transactions of the same nature in the commercial world and carried out in a similar way. (2) In addition to the outward badges of trade, in order to be a trading transaction its purpose must be commercial. (3) Then question "was it trading" is a question of fact for the commissioners. (4) In deciding that question the commissioners must look at the transactions as a whole including the steps taken for its implementation. (5) The commissioners must decide whether the transaction was in reality merely a device to secure a fiscal advantage or a genuine trading activity. (6) The ultimate question always remains "what was the purpose of the transaction?" That question will normally be answered by an objective analysis of the transactions viewed as a whole. (7) If the appearance of the matter, as shown by an objective analysis of the transactions, is equivocal, the subjective intention of the taxpayer is relevant in determining the purpose of the transaction and will generally be decisive. (8) A transaction can be equivocal and therefore evidence of subjective intention relevant even if there was a possibility of the transaction producing a commercial profit as opposed to a tax benefit to the taxpayer. (9) Although the purpose of the other party or parties to the transactions, being part of the circumstances, is relevant, the question in each case is whether the taxpayer was trading. . (10) If the sole purpose of the transaction is to gain a fiscal advantage, in law that cannot amount to trade. (11) If the transaction has some commercial features but also an element of fiscal advantage, it is for the commissioners to weigh the conflicting elements to decide whether the transaction was entered into by the taxpayer for essentially commercial purposes but in a fiscally advantageous form or essentially for the purpose of obtaining a fiscal advantage under the guise of a commercial transaction. In the former case, the transaction would constitute trading; in the latter it will not."
"In the present case the commissioners felt bound to ignore all the fiscal consequences which are beneficial to the taxpayer because Victory Partnership had entered into the scheme 'with fiscal motives as the paramount object'.
Similarly, in the view of Sir Nicolas Browne-Wilkinson V-C, the taxpayer is deprived of all the beneficial effects of the scheme if the scheme is entered into 'essentially for the purpose of obtaining a fiscal advantage under the guise of a commercial transaction'."
"My Lords, I do not consider that the commissioners or the courts are competent or obliged to decide whether there was a sole object or paramount intention nor to weigh fiscal intentions against non-fiscal elements. The task of the commissioners is to find the facts and to apply the law, subject to correction by the courts if they misapply the law. . The section [section 41(1) of the Finance Act 1971] is not concerned with the purpose of the transaction but with the purpose of the expenditure. It is true that Victory Partnership only engaged in the film trade for the fiscal purpose of obtaining a first year allowance but that does not alter the purpose of the expenditure. The principles of Ramsay and subsequent authorities do not apply to the expenditure of £3.25M because that was real and not magical expenditure by Victory Partnership.
The Vice-Chancellor referred to authorities in which intentions sometimes illuminated and sometimes obscured the identification of a trading purpose. But in every case actions speak louder than words and the law must be applied to the facts."
"In Overseas Containers v. Stoker . a parent company, anticipating losses on capital account in respect of loans repayable in German currency formed the taxpayer company as a finance company which took over the loans, sustained the losses and claimed to deduct the loans for the purposes of corporation tax. The commissioners, Vinelott J . and the Court of Appeal held that the acquisition of the loans by the financing company was not a trading transaction. Vinelott J said . :
'The only purpose of the interposition of the taxpayer company was to transmute the base metal of an exchange loss on capital account into the pure gold of a revenue loss. A transaction designed to achieve that fiscal alchemy is not a trading transaction.'
In the present case the legal effect of the transaction, whatever its design, was a trading transaction whereby Victory Partnership had a 25 per cent interest." (Emphasis supplied)
THE DECISION
" . within the range of arm's length prices but at the end of the range designed to show the maximum profit to [NAC]."
"The recital of events shows that the property market at the time was volatile, with people making and withdrawing offers in quick succession. Clearly nothing was certain until contracts were exchanged. But the procedure for selling all the [Properties] was well in hand with at least one offer already made for each of them. [NAC] continued a process of selling that the vendor companies had started."
"The legislation with which we are concerned has the obvious purpose of converting a capital loss into a trading loss that is available for group relief. As Lord Templeman pointed out in Reed v. Nova Securities . the Revenue cannot complain if the taxpayer makes use of an opportunity given by Parliament. The issue is simply whether the Appellant acquired the Properties as trading stock, not whether its purpose was to save tax. The legal principle which we apply is the same as the one applied in Ensign Tankers . on the question whether the partnership was trading. Lord Jauncey said at 248d:
"I do not consider that . Lupton requires that the trading transaction be de-natured because the taxpayer has incorporated it within a tax avoidance scheme which seeks to obtain for him greater fiscal advantages than the trading transaction if standing alone would produce. When Parliament has provided that a taxpayer shall be entitled to certain allowances in certain circumstances I can see no reason in principle why when those circumstances exist he should be deprived of those allowances simply because he has sought and failed to engineer a situation in which he obtained allowances greater than those to which the circumstances entitled him."
The question whether the Appellant acquired the Properties as trading stock is not to be decided by whether it acquired the Properties for tax reasons. The issue is one of construction of the legislation."
"We agree with Mr Jones's contention on Macniven v. Westmoreland Investments Ltd [2001] 2 WLR 377 that whether property is acquired as "trading stock" is a commercial concept, recognised in accountancy. As Lord Hoffmann said of the Ramsay principle in paragraph 32 on page 388b "the court was required to take a view of the facts which transcended the juristic individuality of the various parts of the preplanned series of transactions." However, as in Ensign Tankers, and as Lord Hoffmann said in Macniven at paragraph 59 on page 396a "Even if a statutory expression refers to a business or economic concept, one cannot disregard a transaction which comes within the statutory language, construed in the correct commercial sense, simply on the ground that it was entered into solely for tax reasons. Business concepts have their boundaries no less than legal ones." We approach the facts on this basis."
" . what was the purpose of the change on 13 November 1996, and what really changed on that date?"
"25. While we accept that the effect of the contract for the acquisition by [NAC] was to put all the risk relating to the holding of the Properties into one company instead of six group companies, we do not accept that this was a purpose. Purpose was something that the companies were trying to achieve. The holding company had made a decision to dispose of the Properties whichever company owned them, and the directors of the vending companies and [NAC] were the same. It is not clear that there was any benefit to the holding company or the separate property-owning companies in the risk being in one company; it was not the case that the liability could exceed the value of the asset. Even the convenience of one company being able to sell is not very significant when all the companies had the same directors. The sale of the Properties by the existing property-owning companies was already well in hand. Accounting considerations made it essential for the properties to be disposed of by early March 1997.
26. What difference did it make whether between 13 November 1996 and March 1997 an unsold property was owned by [NAC] or by the vendor companies? While we also accept Mr Taljaard's answer that the transfers of properties had been made on many occasions in the past within the group, the question related to these particular Properties at the particular time of transfer. We think his answers were prevaricating and we find that there was no purpose other than tax for the transfer. This absence of non-tax purposes does not prevent the acquisition of the Properties by [NAC] from being as trading stock but it makes us approach the question more critically and look at the facts in the wider context of the group, rather than looking at [NAC]'s transactions on their own.
27. If we start with the purpose of the directors of the vendor companies immediately before 13 November 1996 it is clear that it was to realise the Properties. This was a purpose common to all property investment companies in the group and derived from a decision of the group to dispose of all its commercial properties. The directors of each company were group employees. As we have said the stage this process had reached was that Northampton was almost sold, contracts being exchanged five days later, Langham Place was the subject of three offers and negotiations had been opened with Great Eagle, the ultimate purchaser, and the portfolio of the remaining properties (except Jarman Fields) was the subject of one offer and another expression of serious interest, although neither of them was the ultimate purchaser. If the vendor companies had continued to carry out that purpose, although Mr Peacock QC [counsel for NAC] did not concede it, there is in our view no doubt that they would merely have realised their capital assets. When [NAC] took over the properties and completed the process of selling we ask ourselves whether the same directors, now in their capacity as directors of [NAC], had a different purpose. We do not think they did. We cannot point to anything that they did that was different afterwards from what it was before. It remained the group's purpose to dispose of the Properties whichever company owned them. Accordingly we find that the same purpose of realising the assets continued as before.
28. We now consider what [NAC] actually did and ask ourselves whether it acquired the Properties as trading stock. Looking at [NAC] in isolation it bought the Properties, being the type of asset for which it was already a dealer, and immediately sold them at a profit, which is a classic case of trading. If we were to look at [NAC] in isolation we would have no hesitation in saying that it acquired the Properties as trading stock, whatever the purpose of the Appellant. "
"29. First, we are applying a section which deals with intra-group transfers where the two companies hold the assets in different capacities. In order for us to decide that [NAC] acquired the Properties as trading stock when they were not trading stock of the vendor companies we must be able to point to some difference which occurred other than the mere fact of [NAC] acquiring the Properties. We are unable to detect any such change. [NAC] continued to realise the Properties held by the vendor companies as capital assets (and presumably, although it is not in issue in this case, as to the properties acquired on 18 November 1996 as trading assets) in exactly the same way as the vendor companies had done. Mr Taljaard agreed:
Q. So what happened after 13 November that was any different to what was going on before?
A. I certainly did not try any harder. I was trying as hard as I could throughout the whole time.
[NAC] was merely a vehicle through which the existing investment companies sold the Properties as investments (and presumably through which the dealing properties acquired on 18 November 1996 were sold as trading properties).
30. Secondly, the transactions were driven by the group's purpose in realising all the commercial properties wherever held within the group. We have not found that [NAC] had any independent purpose in disposing of the Properties.
31. Thirdly, we are bound to take a commercial view of whether the Properties were acquired as trading sock. In terms of Macniven . would a commercial person knowing all the facts say that [NAC] had acquired the Properties as trading stock? We do not think he would. He would say that nothing had really changed and they continued to be held as investment properties."
THE JUDGE'S JUDGMENT
"96.But I do not consider that these decisions are authority for the proposition (as the Appellant contends) that a transaction which is entered into with a view to profit or which has some commercial justification will necessarily qualify. In Coates v. Arndale Properties Ltd Lord Templeman referred to the profit of £10,000 being a timid veil. In Reed v. Nova Securities Ltd he referred to the requirement that the stock must be acquired for the purposes of that trade with a view to resale at a profit, and it was held that the debts had been acquired as trading stock because it was conceivable that Nova might have decided to acquire similar bank debts from a source unconnected with the group and in the hope of making a profit. In Reed the shares did not qualify because they were worthless and there was no commercial justification or conceivable reason for their purchase, and in Ensign Tankers (Leasing) Ltd v Stokes Lord Templeman said that Arndale did not acquire the lease as trading stock, because the assignments had no commercial justification. In my judgment he was not doing more than confirming that the view to profit and the presence of commercial justification were relevant factors. The cases do not decide that they are sufficient factors."
"To summarise the legal principles:
(1) Parliament has conferred on a group of companies power to convert an allowable loss into a trading loss which could then be shuffled to secure a tax advantage. The only requirement was that there must be an acquisition by a trading company "as trading stock": Reed v Nova Securities . at 202. The onus is on the taxpayer to show that the property was acquired as trading stock: ibid. at 199.
(2) Fiscal motive (even if it is the sole or paramount motive) will not de-nature what would otherwise be a commercial transaction: especially Ensign Tankers at 676-7; Reed v Nova Securities Ltd. at 197, 202.
(3) But if the essence of the transaction is explicable only on fiscal grounds, then the mere presence of trading elements will not turn it into a trading transaction: Lupton .. Some transactions may be so affected or inspired by fiscal considerations that the shape and character of the transaction is no longer that of a trading transaction: ibid; Coates v. Arndale . at 1333.
(4) For this purpose, it is necessary to look at the transaction as a whole: Coates v. Arndale . at 1332-3; Overseas Containers (Finance) Ltd v Stoker . at 614-5.
(5) The transaction, to qualify, must have some commercial justification or conceivable reason: Coates v Arndale . at 1332-3; Reed v Nova Securities . at 202; Ensign Tankers . at 679.
(6) The asset must not only be of a kind which is sold in the ordinary course of the company's trade but must also be acquired for the purposes of that trade with a view to resale at a genuine profit: Coates v. Arndale . at 1332-3; Reed v Nova Securities . at 200, 202; Ensign Tankers . at 679.
(7) Whether the circumstances of the transaction are normal is relevant, and in cases of doubt the taxpayer should be required to prove its case by evidence: Reed v Nova Securities . at 195, 199.
(8) Whether there is a profit in the transaction, or whether it has a commercial justification, are important elements in determining whether the transaction is a commercial one. If there is no profit or no commercial justification, then the acquisition will not normally be of trading stock. But the fact that there is a profit, or the fact that there may be some "conceivable reason" for the transaction does not necessarily mean that it was acquired as trading stock.
(9) What is trading, or what is trading stock, is a matter of fact for the General or Special Commissioners, and their conclusion is only subject to review in accordance with the principles in Edwards v Bairstow . (itself a case on whether a transaction was an adventure in the nature of trade)."
"98.The question is whether the Special Commissioners correctly directed themselves in law, and whether their findings of fact can be interfered with in accordance with familiar principles.
99. I am satisfied that the Special Commissioners directed themselves correctly in law. Their starting point was that the Revenue could not complain if the taxpayer made use of an opportunity given by Parliament, or that its purpose was to save tax or whether it acquired the Properties for tax reasons. The issue was simply whether [NAC] acquired the Properties as trading stock.
100. In deciding that question, it was entitled to look at the group as a whole. It came to the conclusion on the facts that nothing happened except [NAC]'s acquisition of the Properties, and they were "unable to detect any change." [NAC] continued to realise the Properties held by the vendor companies as capital assets in exactly the same way as the vendor companies had done, and [NAC] was merely a vehicle through which the existing investment companies sold the Properties as investments. [NAC] did not have any independent purpose in disposing of the Properties. A commercial person knowing all the facts would not say that [NAC] had acquired the Properties as trading stock. He would say that nothing had really changed and they continued to be held as investment properties.
101.In my judgment these findings have to be read in the light of the very important findings to which I refer in paragraphs 26-30. The first was that not only was the transaction driven by tax considerations but that it was deliberately dressed up as a commercial transaction by documents which were designed to indicate (contrary to the facts) (a) that the Ladbroke group had just decided to wind down its property investments (when in fact the decision had been taken in 1994); (b) that [NAC] had decided to expand its dealing activity; (c) that [NAC] had approached the vendors to buy the Properties; and (d) that [NAC] had special property dealing expertise. The second matter which the Special Commissioners were entitled to take into account was the fact that the claimed commercial justification was to transfer the risk of holding the properties to [NAC]. On this they found that Mr Taljaard was prevaricating and they rejected his evidence that that was a purpose. There is no reason to disturb any of their findings of fact (despite some suggestion to that effect on behalf of [NAC]). There was evidence to justify their conclusion that the acquisition was not of trading stock, even though the transaction was designed to provide, and did provide, some profit for [NAC]. In substance they decided that, on the facts of this case, nothing happened except that the name of [NAC] was lent to the sales of the Properties, and that the Ladbroke group created a paper trail to give the impression that it had entered into a genuine transaction to purchase the Properties."
THE ARGUMENTS ON THIS APPEAL
"An investment does not turn into trading stock because it is sold."
CONCLUSIONS
"There were therefore sound commercial reasons for converting the potential capital loss of SPI into a trading loss suffered by Arndale and there is express statutory provision which enables this to be done for corporation tax purposes."
"There was a tax avoidance motive in both transactions. This did not prevent the taxpayer from claiming and proving that the book debts had been acquired and disposed of as trading stock."
"The question whether [NAC] acquired the Properties as trading stock is not to be decided by whether it acquired the Properties for tax reasons."
"But the fact that there is profit, or the fact that there may be some 'conceivable reason' for the transaction does not necessarily mean that it was acquired as trading stock."
RESULT
Lord Justice May:
Master of the Rolls: