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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Argyle Park Taxis Ltd v Revenue and Customs [2008] EWHC 1144 (Ch) (29 April 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/1144.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1144 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ARGYLE PARK TAXIS LIMITED | Claimant/Respondent | |
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HM REVENUE AND CUSTOMS | Defendant/Appellant |
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PO Box 1336 Kingston-Upon-Thames Surrey KT1 1QT
Tel No: 020 8974 7300 Fax No: 020 8974 7301
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR J PUZEY (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
"William Stevens gave evidence under oath and stated that the Appellant was formed as a merger of two businesses Argyle and Park Taxis. He had been a director of Argyle Taxis and had worked in the merged company for approximately 14 years. The Appellant employs staff, who work out of a central office, they allocate work in the form of a telephone booking system, and provide two way radios to call their drivers. There is no requirement for the drivers to return their radios when they are on holiday or not working. The drivers provide their own cars, fuel and pay the Appellant for the use of the radio, staff and the other administration overhead. The drivers pay "settle income" of £80 to the Appellant for the casual work and £72 for the contract work. As far as the casual work is concerned the Appellant, through its staff, advise the drivers over the radio, of any customer who telephone for a taxi service. Usually the nearest driver to that customer provides the taxi. The customer pays the driver, who in turn pays the Appellant £80 each week out his fares. Both parties agree that the Appellant acts as agent for the drivers for the casual work and that VAT is to be charged on the £80."
"When the journey is completed the driver obtains a ticket from the customer identifying the price of the journey. The driver gives a copy to the Appellant each day that is worked The Appellant calculates the amount due to the driver and pays him/her within two days of receiving the ticket but then deducts a weekly sum of £72. The Appellant refers to this as the "settle income". John Dunne confirmed that if the contract customer failed to pay the invoice for work done on the due date or not at all, the Appellant stood the loss. There would be no prospect of asking the drivers to refund the unpaid fare. He also insisted that the radios when used for the contract work were provided solely for the benefit of the Appellant, who in any event owned them."
"The appellant states they act as principals for the taxi drivers for this work (I interpose to say that is the contract work) and they do not, therefore, provide a supply of 'settle income' which gives rise to a VAT liability. The commissioners state that the appellant acts as agents for the contract work and VAT is chargeable on the 'settle income'."
"We accept Mr Gibbon's proposition that there is a difference between the two services. As Mr Cannan has said the case law depends on the facts in the individual cases. In this case the Appellant is solely responsible for obtaining the contract customers. It carries out substantial negotiations on an on-going basis with all the customers. It is concerned to see that the service to those customers is carried out effectively and to that end is selective as to the drivers it wishes to use. It has also worked out a complicated fare system which it insists that its drivers use. This means that the drivers receive a fixed fee for a particular journey, unlike when they take casual customers."
"Section 5(2) (b) of the VAT Act 1994 provides that... "anything which is not a supply of goods but is done for a consideration is a supply of services". We agree with Mr Cannan that the amount owing from the drivers from the contract customers calculated every two days is consideration for the services the Appellant has provided to the drivers. This is a separate and different supply from that provided by the Appellant to the contract customers."
"A driver working for the appellant receives payments from the appellant in respect of work for account customers based on an agreed scale of charges which, as already mentioned, is lower than the scale paid by the account customer to the appellant. If an account customer needs a driver, that takes priority over a cash customer. A driver cannot refuse to take an account customer. As part of the terms of his engagement, the driver participates in what the appellant describes as a bonus scheme. This is a sliding scale of payments starting with a payment by the driver to the appellant of £100 if he does no account journeys in a week."
"The driver benefits from the appellant's set up of telephone bookings and radio contact and is willing to pay for this for access to the cash business. The reality, it seems to us, is that there are two separate payments, one by the driver to the appellant for the benefit of being provided with cash business and another by the appellant to the driver for carrying out the accounts business. As a convenience they are offset and, in most cases, the amounts due from the driver appear to be a reduction in payments to him for accounts business rather than a payment by the driver but nonetheless they are separate items (I omit words). This was not just a reduction in what the driver was paid for accounts business. It was a reduced payment which he made for the privilege of working for the appellant and the benefits that brought in the form of access to cash business."
"The schedule of payments due from the drivers shows that two drivers, 132 and 140, regularly paid £100 every week, implying they did no accounts work. Mr Gregory explained that this was not the case. They drove vans owned by the appellant rather than their own vehicles exclusively on account business as part of the courier service provided by the appellant. The charge paid by the account customers for this service is higher than that paid for normal passenger business and the driver is also paid at a higher rate for the same journey. The £100 deduction is a flat rate deduction not depending on the number of journeys.
Although there was no evidence on the point, we assume that there is no requirement to pay £100 if the driver does not work in a particular week. We consider that this claim is quite different from the others. The appellant could just as easily have reduced the rate of payment by £100. The drivers are not benefitting from the ability to do cash business except for the possibility of doing so at weekends which the appellant allows them to do. It seems most unlikely that the appellant's set up of telephone bookings contributes at all to this. Accordingly, insofar as the assessment relates to payments of £100 by these two drivers, while driving vans owned by the appellant, we allow the appeal."