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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 >> HM Revenue & Customs v Mayflower Theatre Trust Ltd [2006] EWCA Civ 116 (22 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/116.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 116 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT, QBD
MR JUSTICE HART
CH/2005/APP/0729
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CHADWICK
and
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
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COMMISSIONERS OF HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MAYFLOWER THEATRE TRUST LTD |
Respondent |
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D. Milne QC & Philippa Whipple (instructed by Forbes Hall) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 22 – 24 January, 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Carnwath:
Introduction
"The (Trust) would pay a consideration to the production company for putting on the performance with the company bearing the costs of the production including a proportion of the marketing expenses. The size of the consideration paid by the (Trust) would depend upon the relative strength of the negotiating positions of the parties, the costs of the production and the projected ticket sales for the performance."
VAT principles
"The principle of the common system of value added tax involves the application to goods and services of a general tax on consumption exactly proportional to the price of the goods and services, whatever the number of transactions which take place in the production and distribution process before the stage at which tax is charged.
On each transaction, value added tax, calculated on the price of the goods or services at the rate applicable to such goods or services, shall be chargeable after deduction of the amount of value added tax borne directly by the various cost components."
a) …
b) There shall be attributed to taxable supplies the whole of the input tax on such of those goods or services as are used or to be used by him exclusively in making taxable supplies.
c) No part of the input tax on such of those goods or services as are used or to be used by him exclusively in making exempt supplies …. shall be attributed to taxable supplies.
d) There shall be attributed to taxable supplies such proportion of the input tax on such of those goods or services as are used or to be used by him in making both taxable and exempt supplies as bear the same ratio to the total of such input tax as the value of the taxable supplies made by him bears to the value of all supplies made by him in the period. (emphasis added)
The rules governing cases falling under paragraph (d) are known as the "partial exemption rules". (It is not suggested that, for the purposes of this appeal, there is any material difference between the Directive and the Regulations.)
i) Input tax is directly attributable to a given output if it has a "direct and immediate link" with that output (referred to as "the BLP test").ii) That test has been formulated in different ways over the years, for example: whether the input is a "cost component" of the output; or whether the input is "essential" to the particular output. Such formulations are the same in substance as the "direct and immediate link" test.
iii) The application of the BLP test is a matter of objective analysis as to how particular inputs are used and is not dependent upon establishing what is the ultimate aim pursued by the taxable person. It requires more than mere commercial links between transactions, or a "but for" approach.
iv) The test is not one of identifying what is the transaction with which the input has the most direct and immediate link, but whether there is a sufficiently direct and immediate link with a taxable economic activity.
v) The test is one of mixed fact and law, and is therefore amenable to review in the higher courts, albeit the test is fact sensitive.
"The courts have not treated VAT classification in the same way as some questions of classification (for example, whether a contract is of service or for services) which, notwithstanding that there are no facts in dispute, are deemed to be questions of fact so as to exclude on appeal on a question of law: see the discussion in Moyna v Secretary of State for Works and Pensions [2003] UKHL 44; [2003] 1 WLR 1929, 1935, paras 22-25. On the other hand, as Lord Hope of Craighead said in the British Telecommunications Plc case, at p 1386, the question is one of fact and degree, taking account of all the circumstances. In such cases it is customary for an appellate court to show some circumspection before interfering with the decision of the tribunal merely because it would have put the case on the other side of the line." (para 27)
vi) It may be necessary to determine whether, for tax purposes, a number of supplies are to be treated as elements in some over-arching single supply. If so, that supply should not be artificially split:"The criterion is whether there is a single supply from an economic point of view. The answer will be found by ascertaining the essential features of the transaction under which the taxable person is operating when supplying the consumer, regarded as a typical consumer." (College of Estate Management para 12, per Lord Walker[1])vii) A transaction which is exempt from VAT will "break the chain" of attribution. In the words of the Advocate-General (Jacobs) in Abbey National (para 35):
".. the 'chain-breaking' effect which is an inherent feature of an exempt transaction will always prevent VAT incurred on supplies used for such a transaction from being deductible from VAT to be paid on a subsequent output supply of which the exempt transaction forms a cost component. The need for a 'direct and immediate link' thus does not refer exclusively to the very next link in the chain but serves to exclude situations where the chain has been broken by an exempt supply."
Dial-a-Phone
"The direct and immediate link is clearly that of attracting students to the College. The link that thereby they contribute to the College's taxable activities such as, for example, using the bar, is indirect and not immediate …"
"49. The arrangement of insurance is not ancillary to the advertising. Free insurance is not used merely to attract customers to sign air time service contracts for the phones. It is clearly intended to attract new customers to Cornhill Insurance as well and the appellants have a direct financial interest in customers staying with Cornhill on completion of the three free months. It is for that reason that the appellant not the phone service providers are funding a proportion of the free three month insurance with Cornhill….
51. The advertisements relate both to the appellant's intermediary service introducing customers to mobile phone air time providers and to their insurance intermediary service introducing customers to insurance business with Cornhill..."
"Thus, in my judgment, the findings of the Tribunal in paragraph 49 of the Decision and in the first sentence of paragraph 51 of the Decision… seem to me to amount to no more than the drawing of well-nigh irresistible inferences from the undisputed facts. At all events, I can see no basis for challenging those findings on appeal. In particular, I reject Mr Anderson's submission, relying on Southern Primary that it is somehow implicit in those findings that the Tribunal applied a 'but for' test. I can detect no sign that it did so. Nor, in my judgment, did the Tribunal fall into the error (see Midland Bank) of looking beyond the 'purposes' of the particular transactions in question and having regard to some 'ultimate aim' on the part of DaP. As I read the Decision, the Tribunal's approach to the application of the BLP test was entirely in accordance with the correct principles, as enunciated by the ECJ in BLP itself and in Midland Bank." (para 73)
The items in dispute
i) programme sales (zero-rated for VAT purposes);ii) sale of confectionery and drinks (standard rated for VAT purposes);
iii) sale of the appellant's own merchandise (standard rated);
iv) a percentage commission on the sale of the production company's merchandise (standard rated);
v) corporate entertainment under which the corporate could buy the right to a range of eating opportunities coupled with the right to see the show…;
vi) supplies of sponsorship (standard rated);
vii) supplies to the production companies of items such as dry ice, cleaning or repair as a result of smoking, piano-tuning, telephone/fax/photocopying services, agency/credit card commissions, hire of plant and provision of late night transport;
viii) supply of opera glasses and payphone facilities to patrons under arrangements whereby the sale proceeds were split between the appellant and the provider.
The Trust's case
i) The production inputs bear a direct and immediate link with Mayflower's business as a whole, so that they are properly to be classed as "overheads" (the "overhead analysis");ii) Alternatively, the production inputs bear a direct and immediate link not only with the exempt ticket sales but with one or more specific taxable output(s). That being so, the input tax on those outputs falls to be treated as "residual" (the "specific attribution analysis").
iii) One example of the specific attribution analysis is the "taxable tickets analysis" (which in substance formed the basis on which Hart J allowed the appeal – see below). "Taxable tickets" is used in the skeleton to describe "the various packages of benefits and rights sold by Mayflower, each of which includes tickets (i.e. the right to see a performance) as an element, alongside other elements, the whole package being taxed as a single composite supply at the standard rate".
The overheads analysis
"Residual input tax": Input tax incurred by a business on goods and services used or to be used in making both taxable and exempt supplies. This input tax is apportioned between taxable and exempt supplies by the partial exemption method… Residual input tax is commonly referred to as 'non-attributable input tax' or 'the pot'. (para 13)
An earlier reference in the Notice is has a slightly different emphasis:
"Residual input tax is VAT that cannot be directly attributed to either taxable supplies or to exempt supplies, because it relates to both, for example, telephone bills and accountancy fees. It is also known as 'non-attributable' input tax" (para 3.6)
"These provisions entitle a taxpayer who makes both taxable and exempt supplies in the course of his business to obtain a credit for an appropriate proportion of the input tax on his overheads. These are the costs of goods and services which are properly incurred in the course of his business but which cannot be linked with any goods or services supplied by the taxpayer to his customers. Audit and legal fees and the cost of the office carpet are obvious examples." (emphasis added)
That explanation points to an apparent conflict with the need, under the BLP test, for a "direct and immediate" link with a particular supply. Indeed, the European judgments show some tension between the formulaic repetition of the "direct and immediate" test and the practical need to accommodate "overheads", even though not directly linked with any particular supplies.
"35. However, the costs of those services form part of the taxable person's overheads, and as such are cost components of the products of a business. Even in the case of a transfer of a totality of assets, where the taxable person no longer effects transactions after using those services, their costs must be regarded as part of the economic activity of the business as a whole before the transfer. Any other interpretation of art 17 of the Sixth Directive would be contrary to the principle that the VAT system must be completely neutral as regards the tax burden on all the economic activities of a business provided that they are themselves subject to VAT, and would make the economic operator liable to pay VAT in the context of his economic activity without giving him the possibility of deducting it…
36. Thus in principle the various services used by the transferor for the purposes of the transfer of a totality of assets or part thereof have a direct and immediate link with the whole economic activity of that taxable person…." (emphasis added)
Thus, in relation to "overheads" which cannot be attributed to particular supplies, it is enough to establish the appropriate link with the "whole economic activity" of the taxable person. This apparent exception to the ordinary rule seems to be justified by the need to ensure that the VAT system is "completely neutral".
"34. The deduction system is meant to relieve the trader entirely of the burden of the VAT payable or paid in the course of all his economic activities. The common system of VAT consequently ensures complete neutrality of taxation of all economic activities, whatever their purpose or results, provided that they are themselves subject in principle to VAT…
35. It is clear from the last-mentioned condition that, for VAT to be deductible, the input transactions must have a direct and immediate link with the output transactions giving rise to a right of deduction. Thus, the right to deduct VAT charged on the acquisition of input goods or services presupposes that the expenditure incurred in acquiring them was a component of the cost of the output transactions that gave rise to the right to deduct…
36. In this case, in view of the fact that, first, a share issue is an operation not falling within the scope of the Sixth Directive and, second, that operation was carried out by Kretztechnik in order to increase its capital for the benefit of its economic activity in general, it must be considered that the costs of the supplies acquired by that company in connection with the operation concerned form part of its overheads and are therefore, as such, component parts of the price of its products. Those supplies have a direct and immediate link with the whole economic activity of the taxable person…" (emphasis added)
"29. In accordance to settled case-law (the relevant provisions of the Directives) must be interpreted as meaning that, in principle, the existence of a direct and immediate link between a particular input transaction and a particular output transaction or transactions in respect of which VAT is deductible is necessary before the taxable person is entitled to deduct input VAT and in order to determine the extent of such entitlement….
"32. Clearly, there is no direct and immediate link between the various services purchased by a holding company in connection with its acquisition of a shareholding in a subsidiary and any output transaction or transactions in respect of which VAT is deductible. The amount of VAT paid by the holding company on the expenditure incurred for those services does not directly burden the various cost components of its output transactions in respect of which VAT is deductible. That expenditure does not form part of the costs of the output transactions which use the services.
32. On the other hand, the costs of those services are part of the taxable person's general costs and are, as such, cost components of an undertaking's products. Such services therefore do, in principle, have a direct and immediate link with the taxable person's business as a whole …"
"35… expenditure incurred by a holding company in respect of the various services which it purchased in connection with the acquisition of a shareholding in a subsidiary forms part of its general costs and therefore has, in principle, a direct and immediate link with its business as a whole. Thus, if the holding company carries out both transactions in respect of which VAT is deductible and transactions in respect of which it is not, it follows from the first paragraph of Article 17(5) of the Sixth Directive that it may deduct only that proportion of the VAT which is attributable to the former." (emphasis added)
"It follows that the nature of a "direct and immediate link" varies from business to business; and encompasses a spectrum of possibilities from direct attribution of a given input to a given output at the one end, to overheads of the business attributable to the whole of the business activity at the other."
I accept the premise, but not the conclusion. In my view, the metaphor of a "spectrum" is unhelpful; a "slippery slope" might be more apt. The special treatment of "overheads" or "general costs" serves a particular and limited purpose in the VAT system, for those inputs which would not otherwise be brought within the calculation. It should not be extended beyond that purpose. The dichotomy between this and the ordinary rule was correctly identified by Hart J:
"If the inputs fall into the (residual) category it may be for one of two reasons. First, they may not be specifically attributable either to exempt or to taxable supplies. In that situation they are described in the European jurisprudence as being overheads, i.e. cost components of the business as a whole… Secondly they may be specifically attributable both to particular exempt and taxable supplies…"
The link with specific items
i) Programme sales;ii) Production-linked merchandise;
iii) Sponsorship.
Programme sales
"The Appellant produced and sold programmes for each production. The programme would contain information about the show, cast members, the director, the writer and other information specific to the production. The programme was sold separately from the ticket. The price for the programme was fixed at £3 which did not vary between productions. The principal drivers of the programme price were preparation costs together with an assessment of what the purchaser would pay. The Appellant did experiment with a price of £3.50 but encountered considerable consumer resistance to the increased charge. The sale of programmes was zero-rated for VAT purposes."
In the Miss Saigon contract there is specific provision for programmes:
"The (Trust) retains the right to produce the Theatre programmes and reserves the right for it or its agent to obtain four weeks in advance from the Touring Manager, adequate logos, photographs, casting information etc." (cl 16.1)
"The programme itself uses the production: it contains photographs of the production, it contains photographs and details of the actors, it describes the play or work (often giving a synopsis of the work – particularly opera), and gives details of the playwright or composer. The production of the programme is dependent upon, and actually uses the production. There is plainly a direct and immediate link."
"The production costs are not direct cost components of the programmes. The mere fact that they contain information about the performance does not create a direct and immediate link with the production costs that were incurred in order to make that performance possible. The subjective perspective of the theatre-goer and the fact that reading the programme may enhance his enjoyment of the performance does not create a direct and immediate link between the production costs and the supply comprising the sale of a programme. There is no objective link between the two, let alone a link which is direct and immediate. What is being "used" is the commercial opportunity which arose out of an audience which had paid for the right to see the performance."
"(1) The Miss Saigon contract revealed that there was no relationship between the consideration paid and the Appellant's sales of these items. The size of the consideration was determined solely by the ticket sales…
(2) The analysis of the Statutory Reports and Accounts showed that the consideration paid to the production companies did not form part of the costs of these taxable supplies by the Appellant. The costs of the taxable supplies were grouped together under "selling and marketing expenses" whereas the consideration paid was allocated to "costs of sales".
(3) The evidence of the Appellant's Chief Executive confirmed that the price of these taxable supplies did not vary from production to production. The selling price for the supplies were arrived at by fixing the appropriate mark up from the costs of the materials that made up the supplies which did not include the consideration paid to the production companies together with an assessment of the market by the Appellant's management.
(4) The selling price of these taxable supplies was not included in the ticket price for the show. The programmes, confectionery, drinks, sundry items and merchandise were all purchased separately from the ticket for the performance…
(5) Patrons attending the theatre could choose whether to purchase the programmes, confectionery, drinks, sundry items and merchandise. The prior purchase of the ticket for the performance would break the link if there was one with the consideration paid by the Appellant to the production company because of the exempt nature of the supply of the ticket.
We are satisfied on the facts found when taken together that the consideration paid to the production companies was not used for the Appellant's taxable supplies of programmes, confectionery, drinks, merchandise, sundry items and corporate entertainment. We, therefore, find that there was no direct and immediate link between the consideration paid and the Appellant's taxable supplies of programmes, confectionary, drinks, merchandise and corporate entertainment."
i) The selling price of the programmes was not related to the consideration paid to the production companies, but was arrived at by fixing an appropriate mark-up on the cost of materials used;ii) There was no support in the company's accounts for a relationship between the sales of programmes and the consideration paid to the production company;
iii) The programmes were bought separately from tickets, and patrons could choose whether to buy them;
iv) Prior purchase of a ticket would "break the link" (if any) because of the exempt nature of the ticket supply.
i) The lack of a direct relationship between the price of the output supply and the consideration paid for the input is not determinative. I would adopt Hart J's comment, based on Dial-a-Phone:"…, in finding that… the BLP test was satisfied in that case, no reliance was placed either by the Tribunal or the higher courts on any finding that the price charged for the insurance intermediary services had been calculated by reference to the cost of the advertising and marketing inputs. These were nonetheless found to have been "used for" supplying those services. A sufficient nexus existed without it being necessary to show that those inputs were a "cost component" of the price charged for the relevant outputs in the very narrow sense adopted by the Tribunal in the present case." (para 44)ii) The company's accounts may be of some relevance, but they are unlikely to be conclusive. Their purpose is to give a fair view of the business, not of the relationships between particular inputs and outputs for VAT purposes.
iii) That the patron has a choice whether to buy is true of any retail sale, but seems to me irrelevant to the question of attribution. That might have been relevant to an argument (which has not been advanced) that there was one composite supply of the ticket and the programme, but not to the nature of the link within any particular supplies.
iv) The tribunal seems to have misunderstood the "breaking the chain" rule. That would only come into play if the two transactions were links in the same chain, in the sense that one was "a cost component" of the other (see point (viii) in para 11 above). However, the ticket sales and the programme sales are not linked in that way; they are separate transactions. The mere fact that one precedes the other in time, as Miss Hall accepts, is not enough. The question is, not whether they are links in the same chain, but whether each of them has a sufficiently direct link with the production supplies to satisfy the BLP test. The misapplication of the "breaking the chain" rule was another error of law, which entitles us to re-open the tribunal's conclusion.
Production-linked merchandise
"The Appellant sold merchandise from its shop within the Theatre. The merchandise fell in two categories. The first involved the Appellant's own merchandise which was sold from a set stock and did not vary in price and range from performance to performance except the pantomime when the Appellant bought in specific merchandise. The merchandise was sold separately from the tickets for the performance. The selling price of the merchandise represented a percentage mark up from the cost of buying it in and what the market would afford.
The second category consisted of the production companies' merchandise which the Appellant sold on behalf of the company. The Appellant retained 25 per cent of the sales which was deducted from the consideration paid to the companies. The 25 per cent represented the Appellant's costs of selling the merchandise, such as employee time. Sales of merchandise were standard rated for VAT purposes."
"Some merchandise being sold was show-specific merchandise: CDs, T-shirts, hats, programmes etc. The merchandise is marketable only because the purchasers of it are going or have been to see the show in question. This is a further example of Mayflower using the productions to make supplies beyond tickets alone."
"The Appellant contended that it was making taxable supplies of the production companies' merchandise which was specific to each show and distinct from the Appellant's merchandise. The Appellant permitted its employees to sell the companies' merchandise within the Theatre in return for a fixed percentage of the sale proceeds which was deducted as expenses from the consideration paid. We question the Appellant's assertion that the sale of this merchandise was one of its own taxable supplies. Rather we consider that the sale was a taxable supply of the production companies. In this instance the Appellant was acting as agent for the companies charging a commission in the form of a fixed percentage for its services. This commission was part of the companies' costs and reflected as such in the contract for the Miss Saigon production. Thus we find that there was no direct and immediate link between the consideration paid to the production companies and the commission received by the Appellant on the sale of the production companies' merchandise."
"The Tribunal's conclusions are at para 61… are difficult to follow. Mayflower takes a 25% share in the sale proceeds in consideration of its agency services in the sale of this merchandise… That is taxable. The productions have a direct and immediate link with these merchandise sales."
Sponsorship arrangements
"There were a variety of sponsorship arrangements entered into by Mayflower at the material time, which the Tribunal has not sought to analyse separately (see para 63). Those various arrangements [as explained in the Trust's evidence] were:
(i) Sponsorship of theatre seats by individuals or corporates;
(ii) Corporate sponsorship, including:
(iii) Curtain sponsorship; and
(iv) Sponsorship of individual productions.
Sponsorship of a seat is based on a close connection with the various productions shown at the theatre. Such sponsorship is another way for Mayflower to generate money from the productions and closely relates to its business as a theatre.
Sponsorship of the safety curtain is closely associated with the stage and with the productions themselves. Mayflower uses the productions to generate money from this type of sponsorship. It is not production specific, but rather uses all the productions.
Sponsorship of an individual production plainly uses the production, in the sense of creating rights in relation to and out of that production. Those rights are similar in terms of legal analysis to the right to see the show using a ticket."
"The Appellant could strike a sponsorship deal at any time and its duration was not fixed with reference to the productions".
"Taxable tickets"
"The argument was simply that the inputs were directly and immediately linked with the exempt supplies of tickets to the general public because the production costs had been incurred for the purpose of producing the show to which the public would be granted admission. If the appellant was also earning income from granting a right of admission under the umbrella of a taxable supply, there could be no difference in principle, so far as the directness and immediacy of the link was concerned, between the exempt and the taxable supplies."
"… in relation to sponsorship the evidence before the Tribunal of particular examples admitted, in my judgment, only of the conclusion that the sponsorship income was the result of a single taxable supply by the appellant which included the provision of tickets. On that footing I accept Ms. Whipple's submission that there were taxable supplies of the right to see the productions, and that the production costs were linked to those supplies in precisely the same way as to the exempt supplies. That conclusion prevents an analysis, such as was applied in BLP and Southern Primary, under which the attribution of particular costs exclusively to the exempt supplies results in their being wholly consumed by the exempt supplies and incapable of being viewed as general overheads of the business."
"… any rights in the various taxable packages that are associated with the performance are different in character to the rights inherent in the sale of admission rights. The tickets were complimentary and were not referable to any particular performance. Each of the sponsorship agreements under consideration was for a particular period of time and not referable to any particular performance. Under those agreements, the rights granted by Mayflower largely comprised the right to display a logo. That right is not referable to any particular production. Further, the sponsors were not sponsoring individual productions but Mayflower's activities as a whole. By contrast, the production costs were incurred in respect of goods and services which by their nature were directly linked to a specific performance. Objectively there was therefore no direct and immediate link between those costs and the taxable supplies reflected in the sponsorship agreements…"
Conclusion
Lord Justice Chadwick :
Lord Justice Auld:
Note 1 Although it is not relevant to this case, it is to be noted that it is not only where one service is “ancillary” to another that the principle applies (cf Jacobs LJ in Southern Primary at para 37, following the ECJ’s wording inCard Protection Plan). Lord Walker (para 30) explained why it was necessary in this regard to qualify the test as stated by the ECJ. [Back]