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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 >> French v The Secretary of State for Work and Pensions & Anor [2018] EWCA Civ 470 (13 March 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/470.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 470 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS CHAMBER)
UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE LEVENSON
Appeal No CCS/0865/2015
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE COULSON
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GRAHAM EDWARD FRENCH |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR WORK AND PENSIONS KELLY BECKAM |
Respondents |
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Tim Buley (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the First Respondent
The Second Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 13 March 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hickinbottom :
Introduction
The Facts
The Statutory Scheme
" a person who is gainfully employed in Great Britain otherwise than in employed earner's employment (whether or not he is also employed in such employment)".
Section 122(1) of the same Act provides that, for the purposes of the Act:
"'employment' includes any trade, business, profession, office or vocation and
'employed' has a corresponding meaning."
" if you set on foot an organised seeking after emoluments which are not in themselves profits, you may create, by way of a trade or an adventure or a vocation a subject-matter which does bear fruit in the shape of profits or gains. A different conception arises, a conception of a trade or vocation which differs in its nature, in my judgment, from the individual acts which go to build it up, just as a bundle differs from odd sticks."
"13. The most familiar instance was a trade which has as its object the securing of a capital increment. Selling an object for more than one has bought it is not a profit or gain for income tax purposes. (That is why, many years later, we now have a gains tax). But someone who does so on a regular basis may earn profits which are taxable not as profits of a transaction but as profits of a trade. The same is true of profits made from contracts for differences. Similarly finders of objects are not taxable but a person who starts a salvage or exploring undertaking may make profits. They are not profits of the findings but profits of the adventure as a whole. If he makes a loss, the loss is not due to the failure to find but to the trade:
'That is a good test, because it shows the difference between the trade as an organism and the individual acts' (page 41).
The thing about obtaining profits on contracts for differences or obtaining things which are the subject of finding is that there is an 'element of fecundity' about them. All this is no doubt all elementary to a tax lawyer.
14. Rowlatt J then distinguished the case of the bookmaker who is (page 42):
" organising an effort in the same way that a person organises an effort if he sets out to buy himself things with a view to securing a profit by the difference in their capital value in individual cases."
He then turned to the man who bets with the bookmaker and said:
'These are mere bets. Each time he puts on his money at whatever may be the starting price. I do not think he could be said to organize his effort in the way as a bookmaker organises his, for I do not think the subject matter from his point of view is susceptible of it. In effect all he is doing is just what a man does who is a skilful player at cards, who plays every day. He plays to-day, and he plays to-morrow, and he plays the next day, and he is skilful on each of the three days, more skilful on the whole than the people with whom he plays, and he wins. But it does not seem that one can find, in that case, any conception arising in which his individual operations are merged in the conception of a trade. I think all you can say of that man, in the fair use of the English language, is that he is addicted to betting. It is extremely difficult to express, but it seems to me that people would say he is addicted to betting, and could not say that his vocation is betting. The subject is involved in great difficulty of language, which I think represents great difficulty of thought. There is no tax on a habit. I do not think 'habitual' or even 'systematic' fully describes what is essential in the phrase 'trade, adventure, employment, or vocation'. All I can say is that in my judgment the income which this gentleman succeeded in making is not profits or gains, and that the appeal must be allowed, with costs.'
15. Although this final paragraph concludes with a reference to Mr Graham himself, it is couched in terms of complete generality. It is clear that Rowlatt J thought that the effort of a gambler is not 'susceptible to organisation' in the same way that a bookmaker organises his effort. If that is right an individual gambler, as such, cannot be taxable on his winnings. The fact that many gamblers may have (or think they have) a system which results in their winning more often than losing cannot constitute a sufficient degree of organisation to constitute a trade, profession or vocation.
16. This authority has now stood for many years and I would certainly not in 2014 wish to question it, even though it can be said that the Court of Appeal in Cooper v Stubbs [1925] 2 KB 723 left the matter open.
17. Rowlatt J did not have to consider, however, a case of a gambler who could legitimately be said to be running a business. A poker player who appeared regularly on television advising people how to play poker and received a fee for so doing would no doubt be taxable in respect of his fees because he would be engaging in a trade or profession. If in the course of that business he also made winnings from other people participating in that programme, that might well be part of that business. Mr Bartlet-Jones [Counsel for the parent with care] suggested numerous hypothetical cases in which it might be said difficult to say precisely which side of an undoubtedly existing line each such hypothetical case might fall. I am therefore persuaded that it is possible to conceive a case in which a gambler's winnings might be taxable.
18. Subsequent authorities show that such a case is indeed conceivable. In Down v Compston [1937] 2 All ER 475 a professional golfer was taxed on his professional earnings in the ordinary way. He also received winnings from bets on separate private games. These winnings were not taxable since his vocation as a professional golfer did not give rise to his winnings nor did he have an organisation constituting the business of betting on his private games of golf. In Burdge v Pyne [1969] 1 WLR 364, by way of contrast, the taxpayer was the owner of a club which provided fruit machines, a card room and roulette. Mr Burdge was usually present and successfully played three-card brag with members of the club. He (or a member of his family) always acted as dealer and he always won. These winnings were held to be part of his trading receipts and were taxable. The case was thus different from that of Mr Graham because there was a trade whereas Mr Graham 'was not carrying on any trade at all', see page 368A per Pennycuick J."
i) For the purposes of a child support maintenance assessment, the scope of self-employed earnings is the same as it is for the assessment of welfare benefits and income tax. That is unsurprising given that the definition used in the child support scheme is transposed from the Social Security Contributions and Benefits Act 1992, and is in terms of "taxable income".ii) It has been established since at least 1925 that winnings from gambling are generally excluded from the scope of self-employed earnings for the purposes of income tax. The fact that an individual is a "professional" gambler, who has no other income and relies upon gambling for a living, does not of itself mean that he is "gainfully employed" as a "self-employed earner" for the purposes of liability to income tax; nor does the regularity, sophistication or success of his gambling, or his employment of a system that (at least in his own belief or aspiration) will result in his winnings exceeding his losses. A policy reason for HM Revenue and Customs, with the support of the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, not wishing to tax winnings from gambling is not hard to identify: if such winnings were taxable as self-employed earnings, then gambling losses could be set off against other taxable profits or gains, possibly to the point at which the taxpayer might be entitled to claim social welfare benefits (see Hakki at [9]), an outcome which might understandably be regarded as unacceptable in policy terms.
iii) As gambling winnings are not generally taxable as self-employed earnings, neither are they generally regarded as self-employed earnings for the purposes of the assessment of welfare benefits or of a child support maintenance assessment.
iv) Such winnings are only self-employed earnings for any of these purposes where they are an adjunct to a trade or profession in which the individual is engaged, e.g. where the individual makes his winnings as a dealer at a gambling club which he owns (Burdge v Pyne), or where a poker player receives a fee for regularly appearing on television to advise the audience as to how to play poker and makes winnings from other people participating in that programme (see Hakki at [17]). But, without such an association, as a matter of law a gambler's winnings cannot amount to profits or gains arising from a trade, profession or employment, and cannot be within the scope of the self-employed earnings for the purposes of the child support scheme.
The Tribunal Proceedings
"The Court of Appeal in Hakki held that on the facts as found by the First-tier Tribunal in that case 'the only possible conclusion' was that the father was not gainfully employed as a self-employed earner (paragraph 21). That is not the case here. The Court of Appeal had endorsed Judge Mesher's approach to the law in his first decision and, whether or not the First-tier Tribunal knew of the Court of Appeal's decision, its own decision was consistent with it. It was entitled to find the facts that it found, for the reasons that it gave and, on the basis of those facts, to reach the conclusion that it reached and to make the orders that it made."
He consequently confirmed Judge Vasmer's decision that the Appellant's gambling winnings should be included as a factor in the child support maintenance assessment.
The Ground of Appeal
Conclusion and Disposal
Lord Justice Coulson :