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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 >> SAE Education Ltd v Revenue And Customs [2017] EWCA Civ 1116 (28 July 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1116.html Cite as: [2017] STC 2166, [2017] EWCA Civ 1116, [2017] BVC 37 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (TAX AND CHANCERY CHAMBER)
Judge Colin Bishopp and Judge Guy Brannan
[2016] UKUT 193 (TCC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE BLACK
and
LORD JUSTICE SALES
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SAE EDUCATION LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
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Sarabjit Singh (instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor to HM Revenue and Customs) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 27-29 June 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"Whereas the system of value added tax makes it possible, where appropriate, for social and economic reasons, to effect reductions or increases in the tax burden on certain goods and services by means of a differentiation in the rates, but the introduction of zero rates gives rise to difficulties, so that it is highly desirable to limit strictly the number of exemptions and to make the reductions considered necessary by applying reduced rates which are high enough to permit in normal circumstances the deduction of the tax paid at the preceding stage, which moreover achieves in general the same result as that at present obtained by the application of exemptions in cumulative multistage systems;"
"the provision of children's or young people's education, school or university education, vocational training or retraining, including the supply of services and of goods closely related thereto, by bodies governed by public law having such as their aim or by other organisations recognised by the Member State concerned as having similar objects;"
"without prejudice to other Community provisions and in accordance with conditions which the Member States shall lay down for the purposes of ensuring the correct and straightforward application of those exemptions and of preventing any possible evasion, avoidance or abuse."
"The provision by an eligible body of—
(a) education…"
"Eligible body" is defined in Note (1). It includes a long list of different types of school and higher education establishments but we are concerned on this appeal with paragraph (b):
"a United Kingdom university, and any college, institution, school or hall of such a university;"
"The provision of education if—
(a) it is provided by a school or university ; or
(b) it is of a kind provided by a school or university and is provided otherwise than for profit."
""University" includes a university college and the college, school or hall of a university."
"(a) any award granted or to be granted by a university, college or other body which is authorised by Royal Charter or Act of Parliament to grant degrees;
(b) any award granted or to be granted by any body for the time being permitted by any body falling within paragraph(a) above to act on its behalf in the granting of degrees;"
"A body falls within this subsection if it is not a recognised body and either—
(a) provides any course which is in preparation for a degree to be granted by a recognised body and is approved by or on behalf of the recognised body; or
(b) is a constituent college, school or hall or other institution of a university which is a recognised body."
"[36] Note 1(b) on its face refers to five entities, a United Kingdom University, and four entities of such a University. The conjunction connecting "a United Kingdom University" with the four other entities is the word "and", not "including". Further, the four other entities are alternative to each other as can be seen by the conjunction "or" between "school" and "hall". On the ordinary and natural meaning of the words used in Note 1(b) I would construe them as covering both a university itself and, in those cases where there are separate entities which are nevertheless parts of that university, any of those separate entities. Furthermore, the common characteristic of all those four entities in my opinion is that they are suppliers of education. Thus, to take London University as an example, colleges like University College London, and schools like the School of Oriental and African Studies, are all of London University. Again, to take Oxford University as another example, it has colleges and halls (which are what some entities later to become colleges called themselves when formed). Accordingly, just as Note 1(a) covers schools supplying primary and secondary education, so Note 1(b), in my view, covers Universities and other entities supplying university education. If it had been intended that Note 1(b) should cover entities with functions and purposes other than the supply of education, such as a students' union, I would have expected that to have been made explicit. These are provisions conferring exemptions and must be construed restrictively. On that construction, I reject Mr Baldry's submission that the Union is an eligible body within Note 1(b). It does not come within "a United Kingdom University", being an entity distinct from the University, nor is it an institution of the University, supplying, as it does, no education."
"[56] In respectful disagreement with Peter Gibson LJ I do not consider that a college, institution or hall of a university for the purposes of note 1(b) has itself to be a supplier of education in the sense of supplying systematic instruction. Some colleges and halls at Cambridge, for instance, as I understand the position, accept only postgraduate students who receive their education almost exclusively from the University. At least one college at the older universities, namely All Souls in Oxford, (according to my understanding) as a college provides no teaching. Within the United Kingdom the structure of universities is diverse. Some have colleges, some do not. Some have colleges which are the constituent parts of the university, as for example in the case of the Universities of Wales and London (see The Colleges in the University of Cambridge, PR Glazebrook [1993] Camb LJ 501). Others, like Oxford, Cambridge and Durham are collegiate universities: the functions of the colleges and halls on the one hand, and the University on the other, are separate but interrelated. There are thus many variations in the organisation of universities in the United Kingdom and that indicates that there must be some flexibility of approach to the word "institution". The key to being an "institution" within note 1(b), as it seems to me, is whether the body in question has academic links of some kind with the university and recognition accordingly from the university. If it does, it comes within note 1(b) whether it supplies education (in the sense given above) or not. However, in the context of note 1(b) the links must be of an academic nature rather than pastoral or recreational or for the purpose (however valuable) of providing representation for one section of the university community on organs of the university, and thus in my judgment the Students' Union in this case cannot bring itself within the term "institution" as used in note 1(b)."
"[21] I note that the words used in note (1) (b) are 'any college'. I accept Mr Hyam's submission that this cannot mean 'any old college', but it does support at least the following: (i) that colleges are not limited to those within the Education Acts; (ii) that an associated or affiliated college is not ruled out.
[22] Thus I conclude that the weighing exercise is and was the correct approach. It is obvious that the tribunal was influenced by the always speaking doctrine, which it is now agreed was inapt, but was its decision wholly flawed as a result and must the tribunal's conclusion fall away? (i) I do not conclude that the first four factors set out in [16] above, which the commissioners relied upon as necessary pre-conditions of a college being of a university, are indeed such. They are plainly necessary pre-conditions if the question is whether the college is governed by public law and/or within the Education Acts, but on the question as to whether a particular college is a college of a university, I conclude that they are, albeit important features, simply four of the factors to be considered. (ii) Given my conclusions that no words are to be read into note (1)(b), I consider that the tribunal was amply entitled to decide, on the balancing of the 15 features to which I have referred, that, on the facts of this case, SFM was a college of the university. I do not in the event consider that I need to decide which side's arguments as to restrictive construction are the more apt, on the one hand the limitations on the eye of the needle through which all exemptions must pass, and on the other hand the obligation on the member state (subject to any conditions it may impose) to give the exemptions to those providing supplies in the public interest, such as education. There would in my judgment be no objection had the United Kingdom imposed a different or more restrictive test, but, given that the test that they have set down is one simply as to whether a particular college is a college of a university, I conclude that the tribunal was entitled, after weighing up the factors, to be influenced at the end of the day by the fact that the 'fundamental purpose of [SFM] is to provide education services leading to the award of a university degree' by the university. (iii) Applying the Edwards (Inspector of Taxes) v Bairstow test, I do not consider that the only reasonable conclusion on the facts found is inconsistent with the determination to which the tribunal came."
"[47] I draw the following conclusions. For an organisation to qualify as a college of the University for the purposes of Note 1(b):
(1) it must have objects similar to those of public bodies whose aim is to supply school, university or vocational education.
Those objects should be determined by objective factors. What a body does is evidence of its objects.
I accept that the body's objects need not be limited to making such supplies but the more diverse its objects the less similar they will be as a whole to the requisite aim.
If the fundamental purpose of the body is to provide education of one of the specified types it will satisfy the similar objects condition; if it is not then it may not do so; and
(2) it must have some close link to, or association with, the university so that in a loose sense it may be called part of the university. The fact that it must be a college 'of' the university indicates the degree of integration with the university's life. The link may be an academic link in which the university provides education in conjunction with the body, or the body may have some status under the university's constitution. Each must be involved in the other.
The investigation of this issue must encompass both what the body does (its activities) and how it or its activities are linked with the university.
Whether this test is satisfied requires consideration of all the relevant facts. Those in the lists considered in SFM and in subsequent decisions are helpful but are neither exhaustive nor need always be relevant.
If the fundamental purpose of the body (determined by objective factors) is to provide university education, that will not on its own satisfy this test.
(3) It is not a requirement that the body's students typically progress to a degree at the university; if they do however that may be a fact which may point to integration with the university."
"[90] It is necessary when conducting such an analysis to recognise that there are several ways in which an institution may be, or become, a college of a university, ranging from formal constitution as a college to something less well-defined. The lack of precise definition was what led to SFM, and as Arden LJ said in Customs and Excise Comrs v University of Leicester Students' Union [2001] EWCA Civ 1972, [2002] STC 147, also at [56], and Judge Hellier has pointed out at [29] above, the relations between colleges and the universities of which they are properly to be regarded as colleges may take a variety of forms, with the consequence that one must consider the circumstances of each case. It follows that Note (1) must be construed pragmatically and, for the reasons I have given at [86] above, purposively. But purposive construction can be taken only so far, and it cannot be used (as the FTT seems to have used it) as a means of concluding that, because (as it determined) LCC and MU had similar objects, the former must be a college of the latter, subject only to the proviso the FTT identified.
…
[92] The term used in the Note is college 'of' a university, a construction which implies at least some degree of integration. That was also the view of Peter Gibson LJ ([2002] STC 147 at [31] to [36]) and Arden LJ (at [55]) in University of Leicester. Integration is a feature entirely lacking in this case: MU had supervisory rights respecting the quality and content of the diploma course, as an obvious safeguard designed to ensure that only students with an appropriate level of attainment were able to transfer, but had no influence over any of the other courses offered by LCC, over its governance or in any other way; and LCC had no right to participate in the governance of MU (as one might expect in the case of a constituent college), or to provide input into its course content or in any other respect. There should also, one might think, be some evidence of the recognition by the university of the other institution as a college of itself. I do not see how it can plausibly be argued that an institution such as LCC is, or is to be regarded as, a college of a university which does not acknowledge it as such. There was no evidence before the FTT of MU's perception. That is not, in itself, fatal; but where, as here, there is no hint in the documentary evidence that MU intended that LCC should become a college of itself the task of showing that it did is inevitably rendered more difficult."
"[53] All Ms Hall's submissions proceed on the basis that Parliament has not set conditions for the education exemption in compliance with EU law. It is now clear from MDDP [Minister Finansow v MDDP, Case C-349/13, EU:C:2015:84, ECJ; [2014] STC 699] that a member state can and should set the conditions for bodies which are not governed by public law which are to be entitled to the education exemption ('non-public bodies'). How it sets those conditions is a matter for national law.
[54] No one has suggested that Parliament had to use any particular form of words to set these conditions. In my judgment, it was therefore open to Parliament to exercise the UK's option by deciding which non-public bodies were to qualify and then including a list of them in the relevant legislation. That is what Parliament has done in note (1)(b).
[55] Parliament is obviously constrained by art 132(1)(i) as to what bodies it can include. In those circumstances, it has taken the view that the body must be one which provides education in like manner to a body governed by public law, that is, there must be a public interest element in its work. It has decided to draw the line, in the case of universities to those colleges, halls and schools which are integrated into universities and which are therefore imbued with its objects.
[56] For FBT to show that its exclusion from this group is a breach of the fiscal neutrality principle would require it to say that it belongs to the same class as those institutions which meet the integration test in note (1)(b). Neither of the tribunals made any findings that would support that conclusion and this court is hearing an appeal only on a point of law.
[57] FBT contends that Parliament has not met the requirements of the EU law principle of legal certainty by setting out criteria which are to apply to determine when non-public bodies seek to enjoy the education exemption. The criteria have to be 'neutral, abstract and defined in advance'. In my judgment, this is achieved by the combination of note (1)(b) and the SFM factors. These factors are neutral, they are abstract and defined in advance. By applying them, it is possible to know what supplies and which suppliers qualify for exemption."
"All students registered with the University shall be regarded as Institute students and subject to Institute regulations for admissions, assessment, appeals, discipline, grievance and other matters. Students shall also be subject to course regulations of the Institute for its taught awards which have been approved by the University."
"2. As a further extension of that special relationship in the context of higher education in the United Kingdom, the University and SAE Education, UK (hereinafter referred to as SAE-UK) have agreed a long-term Partnership, which is detailed below. This builds upon the existing status of SAE-UK as a Middlesex University Associate College.
3. In February 2011, SAE became a part of the Navitas Group, and SAE-UK in the context of this agreement shall be taken to include any subsequent entity which may be created by Navitas to replace SAE Education UK. Prior agreements between the University and SAE Institute shall remain in operation for all jurisdictions previously agreed other than the United Kingdom, and this agreement shall apply specifically to SAE-UK and its campuses in the United Kingdom.
4. The purpose of this agreement is to further strengthen the degree of collaboration and interdependency in the United Kingdom, and to designate a higher level of integration of SAE-UK operations with those of Middlesex University to ensure that enrolled students of SAE-UK are in every way possible also considered fully as students of Middlesex University.
5. SAE Education UK undertakes, as part of this special relationship in the United Kingdom, that it will, as has been the case over the last 14 years, continue to collaborate only with Middlesex University to the exclusion of other possible partners in higher education in the United Kingdom.
6. Middlesex University undertakes, as part of this special relationship, to ensure that enrolled higher education students of SAE-UK are in every way possible also considered and shall be treated fully as students of Middlesex University from initial enrolment through to course completion and graduation.
7. The effective commencement date for this agreement is 1st August 2011, and the duration is for a period of six years, renewable by mutual agreement.
8. The University and SAE-UK agree that:
a) SAE-UK prospective higher education students who meet the defined criteria and are selected for entry shall be made an offer which ensures that they would become students of both Middlesex University and SAE-UK;
b) relevant student information for SAE-UK students enrolled in approved higher education programs in the United Kingdom shall be maintained in the University administrative and record systems:
c) SAE-UK students enrolled in approved higher education programs shall receive MU student Identity cards;
d) SAE-UK students enrolled in approved higher education programs shall have access to the same range of services as other University students, including access to library and other support services as appropriate;
e) graduates of SAE-UK approved higher education programs shall become alumni of Middlesex University;
f) graduates of SAE-UK approved higher education programs shall access the same benefits as graduates of MU courses in the United Kingdom including the opportunity to attend appropriate graduation ceremonies;
g) students of SAE-UK in approved higher education courses shall be subject to similar rules and regulations as other MU students operated under specified delegations by SAE-UK as approved by Middlesex University.
…..
10. While academic oversight of validated programs will remain with the University under the relevant approved regulations, the University may delegate academic oversight to SAE-UK of selected higher education academic programs under accredited status as duly approved.
…..
12. The partners agree that the new status of the MU-SAE relationship in the United Kingdom will be appropriately publicized and promoted in relevant informational documents and websites."
"We find that there is some acknowledgment by MU of the status of SAE Institute, and that the entity in the UK which carries that status is SEL. The extent of that acknowledgment is limited, in that SAE has been designated since 2010 (or possibly earlier) as an Associate College, and since September 2010 as an accredited institution. On the basis of the evidence, we find on the balance of probabilities that SAE Institute was regarded informally by MU as an associated college as early as 1 May 2009, the date on which SEL acquired the business of SETL."
288. We are satisfied that SEL, as the UK arm of the SAE Institute, has been an Associate College of MU since 1 May 2009. The appropriate documentation does not appear to have been entered into, but both SAE and MU have proceeded on the basis of this status having continued for some time. There is a degree of dependence of SAE Institute on MU, and SAE Institute is also financially dependent on MU. SAE does not fulfil the "absence of distributable profit" test. SEL is entitled to public funding, but of a more limited amount. The links between SAE Institute and MU are of a long-term nature, as demonstrated by the length of the relationship; there is no reason to assume that either party would wish to terminate this existing relationship. The operations of SAE and MU are carried out on separate campuses, but two of the SAE campuses are reasonably close to those of MU. SAE is not under an obligation to offer a minimum number of university places. We have found that SAE Institute, and thus SEL, has similar purposes to those of a university. SAE provides courses leading to a degree from MU. Most of SAE's courses are supervised by MU and the quality standards of such courses are regulated by MU. Students are admitted as members of MU, but do not receive MU identity cards as such. The SAE identity cards acknowledge the relationship between SAE and MU. Students are not directly subject to the disciplinary requirements of MU. Students receive their degrees from MU at MU degree ceremonies. SAE Institute has been described by MU as an Associate College, but the extent of MU's acknowledgment of that status was, at least initially, limited.
289. Taking all our findings into account, we consider that there was a substantial degree of integration of SAE Institute within MU, although as a separate commercial entity, SAE inevitably retained elements of separation and independence. A major factor in terms of integration was MU's decision to advance SAE Institute to accredited status. The fact that SAE was one of only three institutions on which such status had been conferred by MU demonstrated the closeness of the relationship between SAE Institute and MU.
290. In argument, Mr Singh sought to suggest that SEL had taken various steps to bolster the argument that it was a college of MU, in order to avoid having to charge VAT. He characterised the process of drafting and entering into the SACA as a selfserving attempt to achieve this.
291. We do not accept Mr Singh's argument on this issue. He referred to Melvyn Keen's comments on the SACA as "a fairly bland document which merely repeated what was in the Accreditation Agreement". Further, Mr Singh stated later in his argument that the SACA "did not fundamentally change the relationship". In our view, if the SACA was of such little effect, it would not have amounted to a sufficient justification for a claim to exemption.
292. We consider that the SACA has to be viewed as a small part of the development of the long-standing relationship between SAE Institute and MU. The extent of that relationship and of the integration of SAE Institute within the MU structure fall to be considered by reference to a much wider range of factors than a single document. We have considered Mr Singh's arguments that there had been a history of SEL and its predecessors seeking to manipulate matters with a view to ensuring availability of VAT exemption. Although those companies and their advisers appear to have considered the VAT position, we do not accept that the development of the SAE-MU relationship can be regarded as a process of seeking VAT exemption.
293. The factors which we consider to carry the greatest weight are:
(1) Status of Associated College, combined from September 2010 with status of Accredited Institution.
(2) Long-term links between SAE Institute and MU. Similar purposes to those of a university, namely the provision of higher education of a university standard.
(3) Courses leading to a degree from MU, such courses being supervised by MU, which regulated their quality standards.
(4) Conferment of degrees by MU, received by SAE students at MU degree ceremonies.
294. On the basis of the substantial evidence presented to us, and of our findings set out above, we find that SEL as the representative of SAE Institute in the UK is, and has been since 1 May 2009, a college of MU."
"109. In our view it is necessary to adopt a multi-step evaluation of the relationship between the two bodies. The first step is to ascertain whether the university and the college had a common understanding of it. If they did not, the enquiry is likely to end there. Second, the common understanding must be that they are in a relationship of university and college, and not some different relationship, such as partnership. As Judge Bishopp said in LCC, it is difficult if not impossible to see how an institution could properly be considered a college of a university which does not recognise it as such. The same would, of course, be true of a college which does not consider itself to be part of a university. The third step is that one must examine whether the relationship is sufficiently close that the college is a college "of" the university – this was the question in SFM and it is only at this point that most, though not all, of the SFM factors become relevant: the evidence in that case showed that the university and the college had a common understanding, but that understanding alone did not answer the question whether the statutory test was satisfied.
110. The last step is to consider whether the college satisfies the requirement that it supplies education; this step is reflected in the ninth of the SFM factors, which is derived from the art 132.1(i) requirement that the college must have "similar objects" to those of the university; absent similar objects it would not satisfy the supply test (which is why the union failed in University of Leicester). Whether, as has been said in other cases, the "similar objects" requirement is met only if the "fundamental purpose" of the college is to supply university-level education is not an issue we need to decide in this case since it is accepted that SEL does satisfy this part of the test, however it is articulated. We merely add that if it is right, as Arden LJ said in FBT at [33], that an institution may be a college of a university without making exclusively exempt supplies "fundamental purpose" may overstate what must be shown.
111. The error into which the F-tT fell, in our judgment, is that they did not undertake the first and second of the steps we have identified correctly.
112. It is clear that the F-tT attempted, from rather sparse evidence, to determine whether MU's perception of the relationship between it and SEL coincided with SEL's perception, even though they did not put the exercise they were undertaking in quite that way. It is true that the FtT's task was made more difficult because no representative of MU gave evidence. This can be contrasted with the position in SFM where a representative of the university gave evidence from which it was clear that SFM and the University had a common understanding of their relationship. In this case, the F-tT were confined to limited documentary evidence in seeking to ascertain MU's understanding of its relationship with SEL.
113. We agree with Mr Singh that the F-tT's conclusion, that there was a common understanding that SEL became a college of MU from the moment it took over SAE's UK business in May 2009, is difficult to sustain in the light of the documentary evidence and indeed the F-tT's own analysis of it at [165] and [167], in which they discussed SAE Institute's status and concluded by observing that "there is no specific evidence to show an effective date for SAE's attainment of Associated College status, despite the recommendation which had been made at the Sydney conference in February 2002." It is plain from its context that the reference to SAE in that observation was to the worldwide organisation. We also agree with Mr Singh that it was not appropriate for the F-tT to treat the minutes of the meeting on 26 November 2009 (see para 55 above) with caution; they were the best available evidence of MU's perception at the time."
"49. … as the Commission pointed out at the hearing, the 'education, vocational training or retraining' which students receive in an educational establishment is not merely what is provided by teachers from their own knowledge and skills. Rather, it includes the whole framework of facilities, teaching materials, technical resources, educational policy and organisational infrastructure within the specific educational establishment in which those teachers work."
"73. The Tribunal's decision in favour of HMRC was not an absolute answer to a pure question of fact or to a pure question of law. It was a judgment of mixed fact and law on the classification of Regular Pringles for VAT purposes. "Similar to" and "made from" are loose textured concepts for the classification of the goods. They are not qualified by words such as "wholly" or "substantially" or "partly" which have crept into the legal arguments. Those words are not in the legislation itself. The Tribunal's conclusions were on matters of fact and degree linked to comparisons with other goods and related to the composition of the goods themselves. Some aspects of the similarity of Regular Pringles to potato crisps are close to the centre, others are on the fringes. This exercise in judgment is pre-eminently for the specialist Tribunal entrusted by Parliament with the task of fact finding and with using its expertise to make the first level decision, subject only to appeal on points of law.
74. For such an appeal to succeed it must be established that the Tribunal's decision was wrong as a matter of law. In the absence of an untenable interpretation of the legislation or a plain misapplication of the law to the facts, the Tribunal's decision that Regular Pringles are "similar to" potato crisps and are "made from" the potato ought not to be disturbed on appeal. I cannot emphasise too strongly that the issue on an appeal from the Tribunal is not whether the appellate body agrees with its conclusions. It is this: as a matter of law, was the Tribunal entitled to reach its conclusions? It is a misconception of the very nature an appeal on a point of law to treat it, as too many appellants tend to do, as just another hearing of the self-same issue that was decided by the Tribunal."
Lady Justice Black :
Lord Justice Sales :