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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 >> Trigg v HM Revenue & Customs [2018] EWCA Civ 17 (18 January 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/17.html Cite as: [2018] BTC 7, [2018] STC 281, [2018] 1 WLR 5180, [2018] WLR 5180, [2018] EWCA Civ 17, [2018] 2 All ER 455, [2018] STI 257 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (TAX AND CHANCERY CHAMBER)
(Mrs Justice Asplin and Judge Roger Berner)
[2016] UKUT 0165 (TCC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
and
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN
____________________
NICHOLAS M F TRIGG (A PARTNER IN TONNANT LLP) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
____________________
Mr Akash Nawbatt QC (instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor to HM Revenue and Customs) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 22 and 23 November 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"(a) ….. debts …..: and
(b) currency, with the exception (subject to express provision to the contrary) of sterling."
"(1) A gain which accrues on the disposal by any person of—
(a) gilt-edged securities or qualifying corporate bonds, or
(b) any option or contract to acquire or dispose of gilt-edged securities or qualifying corporate bonds,
shall not be a chargeable gain.
….."
"(A1)….. for the purposes of corporation tax "qualifying corporate bond" means (subject to sections 117A and 117B below) any asset representing a loan relationship of a company; and for purposes other than those of corporation tax references to a qualifying corporate bond shall be construed in accordance with the following provisions of this section.
(1) For the purposes of this section, a "corporate bond" is a security, as defined in section 132(3)(b)—
(a) the debt on which represents and has at all times represented a normal commercial loan; and
(b) which is expressed in sterling and in respect of which no provision is made for conversion into, or redemption in, a currency other than sterling, …
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1)(b) above—
(a) a security shall not be regarded as expressed in sterling if the amount of sterling falls to be determined by reference to the value at any time of any other currency or asset; and
(b) a provision for redemption in a currency other than sterling but at the rate of exchange prevailing at redemption shall be disregarded.
….."
"(i) If at any time there is a change in the currency of the United Kingdom such that the Bank of England recognises a different currency or currency unit or more than one currency or currency unit as the lawful currency of the United Kingdom, then references in, and obligations arising under, the Notes outstanding at the time of any such change and which are expressed in sterling will be converted into, and/or any amount becoming payable under the Notes thereafter as specified in these Conditions will be paid in, the currency or currency unit of the United Kingdom, and in the manner designated by the Principal Paying Agent.
Any such conversion will be made at the official rate of exchange recognised for that purpose by the Bank of England.
(ii) Where such a change in currency occurs, the Global Notes in respect of the Notes then outstanding and these Conditions in respect of the Notes will be amended in the manner agreed by the Issuer and the Note Trustee so as to reflect that change and, so far as practicable, to place the Issuer, the Note Trustee and the Noteholders in the same position each would have been in had no change in currency occurred (such amendments to include, without limitation, changes required to reflect any modification to business day or other conventions arising in connection with such change in currency). All amendments made pursuant to this Condition 6(g) will be binding upon holders of such Notes.
(iii) Notification of the amendments made to the Notes pursuant to this Condition 6(g) will be made to the Noteholders in accordance with Condition 14 which will state, among other things, the date on which such amendments are to take or took effect, as the case may be."
"With effect from the Redenomination Date:
(i) the Notes in each Class shall be deemed to be redenominated into euro with the Principal Amount Outstanding of each Note in each Class being equal to the Principal Amount Outstanding of that Note in such class in Sterling, converted into euro at the rate for conversion of Sterling into euro established by the Council of the European Union under the Treaty (including compliance with rules relating to rounding in accordance with European Union regulations);"
"(i) all unmatured Coupons and Receipts denominated in Sterling (whether or not attached to the Notes) will become void and no payments will be made in respect of such Coupons and Receipts;
(ii) the payment obligations contained in all Notes denominated in Sterling will become void but all other obligations of the Issuer thereunder (including the obligation to exchange such Notes in accordance with this Condition 18 (Redenomination)) shall remain in full force and effect;
(iii) new Notes, Coupons and Receipts denominated in euro will be issued in exchange for Notes, Coupons and Receipts denominated in Sterling in such manner as the Principal Paying Agent may specify and as shall be notified to the Noteholders in accordance with Condition 17 (Notice to Noteholders); and
(iv) all payments in respect of the Notes (other than, unless the Redenomination Date is on or after such date as Sterling ceases to be a sub-division of the euro, payments of interest in respect of periods commencing before the Redenomination Date) will be made solely in euro by cheque drawn on, or by credit or transfer to a euro account (or any other account to which euro may be credited or transferred) maintained by the payee with a bank in the principal financial centre of any Participating Member State."
"[77] Approaching the matter initially at a general level, the fact that Ch 2 was introduced partly for the purpose of forestalling tax avoidance schemes self-evidently makes it difficult to attribute to Parliament an intention that it should apply to schemes which were carefully crafted to fall within its scope, purely for the purpose of tax avoidance. Furthermore, it is difficult to accept that Parliament can have intended to encourage by exemption from taxation the award of shares to employees, where the award of the shares has no purpose whatsoever other than the obtaining of the exemption itself: a matter which is reflected in the fact that the shares are in a company which was brought into existence merely for the purposes of the tax avoidance scheme, undertakes no activity beyond its participation in the scheme, and is liquidated upon the termination of the scheme. The encouragement of such schemes, unlike the encouragement of employee share ownership generally, or share incentive schemes in particular, would have no rational purpose, and would indeed be positively contrary to rationality, bearing in mind the general aims of income tax statutes.
[78] More specifically, it appears from the background to the legislation that the exemption conferred by s 425(2), in respect of the acquisition of securities which are "restricted securities" by virtue of s 423(2), was designed to address the practical problem which had arisen of valuing a benefit which was, for business or commercial reasons, subject to a restrictive condition involving a contingency. The context was one of real-world transactions having a business or commercial purpose. There is nothing in the background to suggest that Parliament intended that s 423(2) should also apply to transactions having no connection to the real world of business, where a restrictive condition was deliberately contrived with no business or commercial purpose but solely in order to take advantage of the exemption. On the contrary, the general considerations discussed in para 77 above, and the approach to construction explained in paras 64 and 68 above, point towards the opposite conclusion.
…..
[85] In summary, therefore, the reference in s 423(1) to "any contract, agreement, arrangement or condition which makes provision to which any of sub-ss (2) to (4) applies" is to be construed as being limited to provisions having a business or commercial purpose, and not to commercially irrelevant conditions whose only purpose is the obtaining of the exemption."
"The essence of the new approach was to give the statutory provision a purposive construction in order to determine the nature of the transaction to which it was intended to apply and then to decide whether the actual transaction (which might involve considering the overall effect of a number of elements intended to operate together) answered to the statutory description. Of course this does not mean that the courts have to put their reasoning into the straightjacket of first construing the statute in the abstract and then looking at the facts. It might be more convenient to analyse the facts and then ask whether they satisfy the requirements of the statute. But however one approaches the matter, the question is always whether the relevant provision of the statute, upon its true construction, applies to the facts as found …"
"13. My Lords, I confess that during the course of this appeal I have followed the same road to Damascus as Peter Gibson LJ. Like him, my initial view, which remained unchanged for some time, was that a payment comprising a circular flow of cash between borrower and lender, made for no commercial purpose other than gaining a tax advantage, would not constitute payment within the meaning of section 338. Eventually, I have found myself compelled to reach the contrary conclusion. My reasons are as follows …"
15. I must elaborate a little. In the ordinary case the source from which a debtor obtains the money he uses in paying his debt is immaterial for the purpose of section 338. It matters not whether the debtor used cash in hand, sold assets to raise the money, or borrowed money for the purpose. Does it make a difference when the payment is made with money borrowed for the purpose from the very person to whom the arrears of interest are owed? In principle, I think not. Leaving aside sham transactions, a debt may be discharged and replaced with another even when the only persons involved are the debtor and the creditor. Once that is accepted, as I think it must be, I do not see it can matter that there was no business purpose other than gaining a tax advantage. A genuine discharge of a genuine debt cannot cease to qualify as a payment for the purpose of section 338 by reason only that it was made solely to secure a tax advantage. There is nothing in the language or context of section 338 to suggest that the purpose for which a payment of interest is made is material.
16. This is not surprising. Payments of interest, other than interest on a bank loan, have the advantageous tax consequence of constituting charges on income. But, hand in hand with this, they have the consequence that tax must be deducted from the payment and paid to the Inland Revenue. In the ordinary course, therefore, an exchange of cheques between creditor and debtor does not give rise to a tax advantage. The tax benefit of being able to treat the payment as a charge on income is offset by the obligation to account to the Inland Revenue for tax on the payment. This being so, there is no basis on which Parliament can be taken to have intended that payment in section 338 should bear some special meaning which would exclude the case where the interest debt is satisfied with money borrowed for the purpose from the creditor."
"The special commissioners found as a fact that the loans which were made by the Scheme to Westmoreland were real loans. It is clear that, but for the loans, Westmoreland could not have afforded to pay the interest which it owed to the Scheme. Nevertheless the fact is that the loans were made and the interest was paid. Westmoreland's claim is therefore based upon transactions which have been found by the special commissioners to be genuine. There was no step that falls to be ignored because it was artificial. It cannot be said that there was no business or commercial reason for the interest to be paid. The payment reduced the amount of Westmoreland's accrued liability to pay interest. It was received as interest in the hands of the payee. Westmoreland's obligation to pay interest to that extent was discharged. Nothing was inserted into the transaction to make it appear to be different from what it was. It was a payment of yearly interest which was paid out of the company's profits for the relevant accounting period."
"Sterling"
"We do not, however, accept that in the TCGA, and in particular in s 117, the word "sterling", whether on its own or as part of the expression "currency other than sterling" can have any meaning other than the existing lawful currency of the UK, that is pounds sterling. Whilst it is correct that Parliament intended that the lawful currency of the UK should not be an asset for CGT purposes, but should be the unit of measurement or account, it legislated to give effect to that intention by referring to what was, and is, that lawful currency, namely sterling, and not by reference to any other currency that might, at some future time, become that lawful currency. Contrary to Mr Gammie's submission, in the context of the TCGA "sterling" does not "connote the UK's lawful currency" or its money; it is simply because sterling is that lawful currency that Parliament has legislated by reference to pounds sterling. If Parliament had wished to refer to any currency other than the pound sterling which might become the lawful currency of the UK it would have done so by the use of language appropriate to that aim. But it did not do so."
Section 117(2)(b)
"Such a purposive interpretation of s 117(1)(b) appears to accord with the purpose identified in Harding. 'British' bonds, in the sense of bonds issued denominated in sterling and no other currency, with their value fixed in sterling, obtain QCB exemption even if they are actually redeemed in a different currency. How can it matter whether they are converted before rather than at the moment of redemption as long as their sterling value is unchanged? Parliament cannot have intended to draw such a pointless distinction and s 117(2)(b) must be read accordingly."
Currency other than sterling
"Article 2
As from 1 January 1999 the currency of the participating Member States except Greece shall be the euro. As from 1 January 2001 the currency of Greece shall be the euro. The currency unit shall be one euro. One euro shall be divided into one hundred cent.
Article 3
The euro shall be substituted for the currency of each participating Member State at the conversion rate."
"With effect from the respective euro adoption dates, the currency of the participating Member States shall be the euro. The currency unit shall be one euro. One euro shall be divided into one hundred cent."
Lord Justice Floyd :
Lord Justice Hamblen :