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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada (UK) Ltd v HM Revenue & Customs [2010] EWCA Civ 394 (16 April 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/394.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 394, [2010] STI 1440, [2010] STC 1173, [2010] BTC 526 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
The Honourable Mr Justice Patten
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
LORD JUSTICE MOSES
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Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada (U.K.) Limited |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr David Ewart QC and Mr David Yates (instructed by Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 13th-14th January, 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moses :
The First Issue: Accounting Period 2002
'393 Losses other than terminal losses
(1) Where in any accounting period a company carrying on a trade incurs a loss in the trade, the loss shall be set off for the purposes of corporation tax against any trading income from the trade in succeeding accounting periods; and (so long as the company continues to carry on the trade) its trading income from the trade in any succeeding accounting period shall then be treated as reduced by the amount of the loss, or by so much of that amount as cannot, under this subsection or on a claim (if made) under section 393A(1) be relieved against income or profits of an earlier accounting period.
(7) The amount of a loss incurred in a trade in an accounting period shall be computed for the purposes of this section in the same way as trading income from the trade in that period would have been computed.
(8) For the purposes of this section 'trading income' means, in relation to any trade, the income which falls or would fall to be included in respect of the trade in the total profits of the company…'"
"The beauty of the I minus E basis, and a point that is not often grasped, is that under it the shareholders' profit (SP) from operating life assurance business is also effectively charged to tax, so obviating a separate Case I charge on those profits…..
This dual nature of the I-E result is brought out in a number of ways. There are rates of tax on the policyholders' profit (PP) which are lower than the mainstream CT rate. They match (roughly) the basic rate credit the policyholder gets. The profits chargeable at these lower rates are found by calculating the Case I profit (SP) and deducting it from I-E to leave PP. PP is ring-fenced to some extent, in acknowledgement of the fact that it is quasi-fiduciary profit not a real operating profit of the company…" (2.23 of the Revenue's Life Assurance Manual). (my emphasis)
The importance of this view is that it appears to the Revenue that the I-E basis of charge produces a charge on profits available to shareholders equivalent to that which would be levied on a Case I basis. In short, the shareholders' share of the profits is equivalent to the Case I profit or loss and is charged at the same rate. That is the rationale for the imposition of two different rates of tax.
"89 Policy holders' share of profits
(1) The references in sections 88 and 88A above to the policy holders' share of the relevant profits for an accounting period of a company carrying on life assurance business or, as the case may be, basic life assurance and general annuity business are references to the amount arrived at by deducting from those profits the Case I profits of the company for the period in respect of its life assurance business, reduced in accordance with subsection (2) below."
s.89(7) defines Case I profits as :
"(7) In this section –
'Case I profits' means profits computed in accordance with the provisions of the Taxes Act 1988 applicable to Case I of Schedule D."
i) Is s.393(1) a provision of the Taxes Act 1988?
ii) Is it a provision applicable to Case I of Schedule D?
iii) Are the Case I profits of the taxpayer computed in accordance with the provisions of the Taxes Act 1988, including s.393?
"Where for any accounting period the loss arising to an insurance company from its life assurance business falls to be computed in accordance with the provisions of this Act applicable to Case I of Schedule D…."
"The scheme of the corporation tax legislation requires, first the ascertainment of income from a particular source and chargeable gains, as reduced by any relief applicable to income from that source or to those gains, then the ascertainment of the total profits by aggregating the income from the various sources and the gains as reduced by any relief applicable to those total profits, and once the amount of the net total profits has been ascertained the corporation tax prima facie chargeable on the total profits can be determined. That corporation tax may in turn be reduced or extinguished by other reliefs which are expressed to apply to that tax. Only then is the amount of corporation tax payable ascertained."
"There is nothing in the legislation which clearly supports the view that the Case I profit figure employed in ss.88-89 was intended to be the net accrued profits available for shareholders having regard to previous losses as opposed to the Case I profits for that year. The apportionment of relevant profits under s.89(1) is intended to produce the policyholders' share of relevant profits accruing in that period. On the face of it, it does so by deducting the company's profits from the same business and for the same period when computed under Case I. Section 89(3) talks in terms of Case I profits for the period in question. This suggests to me that what is contemplated is the deduction of like from like in the sense that the profit figure should in the case of each computation represent the net profit figure based on receipts minus relevant expenses or liabilities occurring in that year. The application of s.393 to the computation of the Case I profit figure would distort this basis of comparison both in relation to the basic deduction under s.89(1) and in respect of the reduction of Case I profits under the formula contained in s.89(2). In each case accrued losses would be carried forward to reduce the Case I profit figure but without any equivalent adjustment of the I-E figure".[45](my emphasis)
"(3) For the purposes of this section "the shareholders' share" in relation to any income is so much of the income as is represented by the fraction
A
B
where –
A is an amount equal to the Case I profits of the company for the period in question in respect of its life assurance business, and
B is an amount equal to the excess of the company's relevant non-premium income and relevant gains over its relevant expenses and relevant interest for the period."
"..in the context of a regime which equates a life assurance company's notional Sch D, Case I profits to the amount available to its shareholders (in order to calculate the proportion of the BLAGAB profits allocated to its policyholders), the amount of a life assurance company's profits available to its shareholders is as equally affected by brought forward losses as current year losses…the receipts of a current accounting period cannot be said to be available to shareholders until those receipts exceed the expenses of the current and prior accounting periods." [45].
2nd issue: Changes in FA 2003
"Case I profits" means profits computed in accordance with the provisions of the Taxes Act 1988 applicable to Case I of Schedule D and adjusted in respect of losses in accordance with section 76(2C) and (2D) of the Taxes Act 1988."
"(2C) the adjustment in respect of losses that is to be made for any accounting period under paragraph (a) of subsection (2A) above is a deduction of the amount equal to the unused part of the sum which -
(a) by reference to computations made in respect of the company's life assurance business in accordance with the provisions applicable to Case I of Schedule D, and
(b) disregarding section 434A(2),
would fall, in the case of the company, to be set off under section 393 against the company's income for that period."
S.76(2D) contains provision explaining how the quantum of the losses which may be said to be unused is to be calculated and is not relevant.
"(a) the loss resulting from the computation (i.e. the computation in accordance with the provisions applicable to Case I) shall be reduced…"
"7-(1) In section 89(7) of the Finance Act 1989 (which defines Case I profits for the purposes of determining the policy holders' share of relevant profits and the shareholders' share of income), in the definition of 'Case I profits', insert at the end 'and adjusted in respect of losses in accordance with section 76(2C) and (2D) of the Taxes Act 1988'.
(2) Sub-paragraph (1) has effect for accounting periods beginning on or after 1st January 2003.
(3) But section 76(2C) of the Taxes Act 1988, as it applies by virtue of sub-paragraph (1) has effect as if the reference in it to the amount which would fall, in the case of a company, to be set off under section 393 of that Act were to only so much of that amount as is attributable to losses incurred in the accounting period of the company in which 31st December 2002 is included or any later accounting period."
Lord Justice Rix:
Sir Anthony May, President of the Queen's Bench Division: