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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 >> Kuehne & Ors v Revenue and Customs [2012] EWCA Civ 34 (26 January 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/34.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 34, [2012] AACR 40 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (TAX AND CHANCERY CHAMBER)
THE HON MR JUSTICE NEWEY
FTC/18-20/2010
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ETHERTON
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
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(1) KUEHNE + NAGEL DRINKS LOGISTICS LIMITED (2) MR A STOTT (3) MR AC JOYCE |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondent |
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MISS INGRID SIMLER QC and MR AKASH NAWBATT (instructed by General Counsel and Solicitor to HMRC) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 10th November 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mummery :
Introduction
Background facts
The legislation
"(1) The amount of employment income which is charged to tax under this Part for a particular tax year is as follows.
(2) In the case of general earnings, the amount charged to tax is the net taxable earnings from an emolument in the year.
(3) That amount is calculated …by reference to any taxable earnings from the employment in the year…
(6) Accordingly, no amount of employment income is charged to tax under this Part for a particular year unless-
(a) in the case of general earnings, they are taxable earnings from an employment in that year, or
(b) in the case of specific employment income, it is taxable specific income from an employment for that year. "
"(a) any salary, wages or fee;
(b) any gratuity or other profit or incidental benefit of any kind obtained by the employee if it is money or money's worth, or
(c) anything that constitutes an emolument of the employment."
"In this Part of this Act and Parts II to V below-
(a) "earnings" includes any remuneration or profit derived from an employment; and
(b) "earner" shall be construed accordingly."
FTT judgment
"Indeed, in my judgment, the authorities show that to be a profit arising from the employment the payment must be made in reference to the services the employee renders by virtue of his office, and it must be something of a reward for services past, present or future."
"There is a wealth of authority on this matter, and various glosses on or paraphrases of the words in the Act appear in judicial opinions, including speeches in this House. No doubt they were helpful in the circumstances of the case in which they were used, but in the end we must always return to the words in the Statute and answer the question-did this profit arise from the employment? The answer will be no if it arose from something else."
"103. …In this appeal the payment was made to avoid disruption. It was made and received to secure the continued willing service of the employees: it referred to the employees' offices and was in the nature of a reward or inducement to work willingly in the future. I do not agree that the threat of strike action was merely the means by which the payment was secured; it was instead a substantial cause of the payment.
104. On this basis I conclude that the payment was taxable. Because it was paid and received as an incentive to work willingly and without industrial action for the joint venture company, it was an emolument from the employment. That it was also paid and received as compensation for the loss of the pension scheme does not affect this conclusion. It was paid in reference to the services that the employees rendered and was in the nature of a reward or inducement for future willing service."
"34. It was clear from the documentary history …that:-
(i) the genesis of the payment lay in the concern which the employees (through their representatives) had that they would lose the benefit of a defined benefit pension scheme on transfer;
(ii) the payments were made, both from the employers' and the employees' perspective, as compensation for that change in pension scheme;
(iii) the payments were made because, had they not been made, it was likely that industrial action would have followed;
(iv) industrial action would have been damaging to the business of KNDL;
(v) avoiding industrial action enabled a smooth transition to the new venture and such a transition was sought both by employees and employers.
35. To my mind it cannot be said either from the employees' or employers' perspective that the only reason the payments were made was either solely in compensation for the pension changes, or solely in order to achieve a smooth transfer (i.e. avoiding industrial action and having employees working willingly in the new venture). Both these reasons were bound together: I did not pay for my house just because I was obliged to under the purchase contract or just because I liked it. It can no more be said that the employers did not make the payment to compensate the employees than it can be said that the employees did not take the payment for not disrupting the transfer by taking industrial action. I conclude that the payments were made and received both (i) in order to compensate for loss of pension expectations; and (ii) to ensure a "smooth transfer"; and that such was the understanding of all parties."
"58. …I do not believe that the payments came from the cessation of employment. It is true that without the cessation there would have been no payment but to be a sine qua non is not enough to make a payment from employment. The cessation of employment was the trigger for the payment but they were made because of the loss of pension rights and expectations and to ensure willing work without industrial action."
"89. None of the authorities to which I was referred dealt expressly with a payment which was made for two reasons that were not dissociable. It seems to me that the question of taxability in this situation is answered by the statutory words. If it can be said that such a payment comes from the employment then it is taxable even if the payment can also fairly be said also to come from something else or also to be made for a second reason …."
UT judgment
"104. Because [the payment] was paid and received as an incentive to work willingly and without industrial action for the joint venture company, it was an emolument from the employment."
"53. The ultimate question must always be whether a payment is "from" the employment. In deciding that question, the Tribunal may have to consider more than one possible cause of a payment…
54. The difficulty which arises in the present case is that, as I read the Judge's decision, he did not regard it as possible either to identify a predominant cause or to characterise a cause as merely a precursor. He concluded that the payments were attributable to two factors which were "not dissociable".
55. In such circumstances, I agree with the Judge that a payment is to be regarded as "from" an employment even though it might also be said to be "from" something else. The key question –"was the payment from employment?"- is fairly answered in the affirmative. Further, the legislation does not exclude the possibility of a payment being "from" something else as well as employment, even if a single "from" can be identified in most cases. Where, as in the present case, a Judge decides that it is impossible to separate or rank causes, there can be no basis for deciding that a payment is to be attributed to a non-taxable one as opposed to a taxable one. The correct conclusion must, I think, be the Judge's: that the payment was from employment regardless of whether it was from something else as well.
56. As mentioned earlier, Mr Maugham [the appellants' counsel in the UT] suggested that the Judge's approach would mean that the presence of a taxable "from" was decisive even if it was of little weight when compared with a non-taxable "from". However, I do not accept that that is so. On the Judge's findings, this was a case where the taxable "from" was no less important than (and inseparable from) the non-taxable "from". It cannot be inferred that the Judge would have arrived at the same conclusion had the taxable "from" been of less weight than the non-taxable one."
Appellants' submissions
"Does the fact that a payment, made to an employee to compensate him or her for the loss of pension rights, has been secured in part by the threat of industrial action make it necessarily an emolument from the employment when it would not otherwise be an emolument from the employment had it been paid without the threat of industrial action being needed to secure it?"
"…is an important factor in determining whether it is properly to be regarded as a reward or return for the employee's services. The employer's motives in conferring the benefit may be mixed and the determination of what constitutes his dominant purpose is a question of fact for the commissioners to determine. Their finding on this matter is therefore one which a court whose jurisdiction on appeal is limited to correcting errors of law by the commissioners should be slow to interfere."
Discussion and conclusions
"In the past several explanations have been offered by judges of eminence as to the significance of the word 'from' in this context. It has been said that the payment must have been made to the employee 'as such'. It has been said that it must have been made to him 'in his capacity of employee.' It has been said that it is assessable if paid 'by way of remuneration for his services,' and said further that this is what is meant by payment to him 'as such.' These are all glosses, and they are all of value as illustrating the idea which is expressed by the words of the statute. But it is perhaps worth observing that they do not displace the words of the statute."
" …To restate the argument in words of my own, even if this were to result in a difference of formulation, would not be productive of advantage, and I am more than content fully to adopt the single judgment of the Court of Appeal delivered by Lord Russell of Killowen."
Result
Lord Justice Patten :
(i) Viscount Simonds in Hochstrasser v Mayes at p. 705/706 "often difficult to draw the line and say on which side of it a particular case falls";
(ii) Lord Wilberforce in Brumby v Milner at p. 612 "not an easy question to answer";
(iii) Lord Diplock in Tyrer v Smart [1979] STC 34 at p. 36 c-d: "determination of what constitutes his dominant purpose"; and
(iv) Carnwath J in Wilcock v Eve [1994] 67 TC 233 at p. 232A: where there is more than one operative cause "there is an element of value judgment in deciding on which side of the statutory line the payment falls".
Lord Justice Etherton: