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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 >> Gripple Ltd v Revenue and Customs [2010] EWHC 1609 (Ch) (30 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/1609.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1609 (Ch), [2010] STC 2283, [2010] BTC 873, [2010] STI 2120 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GRIPPLE LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HM REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
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Mr David Yates (instructed by HMRC Solicitor's Office) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 11 May 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Henderson:
Introduction
"5(1) For the purposes of this Schedule the staffing costs of a company are –
(a) the emoluments paid by the company to directors or employees of the company, including all salaries, wages, perquisites and profits whatsoever other than benefits in kind;
(b) the secondary Class 1 national insurance contributions paid by the company; and
(c) the contributions paid by the company to any pension fund … operated for the benefit of directors or employees of the company.
…
(2) The staffing costs of a company attributable to relevant research and development are those paid to, or in respect of, directors or employees directly and actively engaged in such research and development."
The wording of paragraph 5(1)(a) which I have quoted was substituted by the Finance Act 2004 with effect for expenditure incurred after 31 March 2004, with the object of excluding benefits in kind from the definition of staffing costs. Before the substitution, paragraph 5(1)(a) simply referred to "the earnings paid by the company to directors and employees of the company". It is agreed that for present purposes nothing turns on this change in wording.
"Whether we have misdirected ourselves as to the application of Schedule 20 Finance Act 2000 in respect of the expenditure of [Gripple] relating to the cost of the services provided by Mr Hugh Facey."
Legislation
"3(1) For the purposes of this Schedule "qualifying R & D expenditure" of a company means expenditure that meets the following conditions.
(2) The first condition is that the expenditure is not of a capital nature.
(3) The second condition is that the expenditure is attributable to relevant research and development (see paragraph 4) directly undertaken by the company or on its behalf.
(4) The third condition is that the expenditure -
(a) is incurred on staffing costs (see paragraph 5),
(b) is incurred on software or consumable items (see paragraph 6),
(c) is qualifying expenditure on externally provided workers (see paragraphs 8A to 8E), or
(d) is qualifying expenditure on sub-contracted research and development (see paragraphs 9 to 12).
(5) The fourth condition is that any intellectual property (see paragraph 7) created as a result of the research and development to which the expenditure is attributable is, or will be, vested in the company (whether alone or with other persons).
(6) The fifth condition is that the expenditure is not incurred by the company in carrying on activities the carrying on of which is contracted out to the company by any person.
(7) The sixth condition is that the expenditure is not subsidised (see paragraph 8)."
"8A(1) The provisions of paragraphs 8C to 8E have effect for determining the amount of the qualifying expenditure of a company ("the company") on externally provided workers.
(2) …
(3) For the purposes of this Schedule the company incurs expenditure on externally provided workers if it makes a payment (a "staff provision payment") to another person (the "staff provider") in respect of the supply to the company, by or through the staff provider, of the services of any externally provided workers.
(4) Qualifying expenditure on externally provided workers is attributable to relevant research and development if the externally provided workers are directly and actively engaged in such research and development.
…
8B For the purposes of this Schedule a person is an "externally provided worker" in relation to the company if the following conditions are satisfied –
(a) he is an individual,
(b) he is not a director or employee of the company,
(c) he personally provides, or is under an obligation personally to provide, services to the company,
(d) he is subject to (or to the right of) supervision, direction or control by the company as to the manner in which those services are provided,
(e) his services are supplied to the company by or through the staff provider (whether or not he is a director or employee of the staff provider or of any other person),
(f) he provides, or is under an obligation to provide, those services personally to the company under the terms of a contract between him and the staff provider,
(g) the provision of those services does not constitute the carrying on of activities contracted out by the company."
The Facts
"5. As a result of the oral and documentary evidence adduced before us, the following facts were proved.
5.1 [Gripple] is an engineering company based in Sheffield which incurs expenditure in research and development. Mr Hugh Facey at all times was and is a director of that company.
5.2 Until 31 December 2003 [Loadhog] was a wholly owned subsidiary of [Gripple], thereafter it was a wholly owned subsidiary of Loadhog Holdings Ltd. Mr Hugh Facey at all times during the relevant period was and continues to be a director of those companies.
5.3 Prior to the 1 January 2004 Mr Facey's salary had been paid entirely by [Gripple] and charged to [Gripple] and both parties agreed this was a cost in respect of which the company could claim R & D tax relief pursuant to the Schedule.
5.4 From 1 January 2004, Mr Facey divided his time between [Gripple] and [Loadhog] and the companies reached an agreement that one half of Mr Facey's salary should be met by [Gripple] and one half of Mr Facey's salary should be met by [Loadhog].
5.5 From 1 January 2004 until 31 December 2006 Mr Facey's salary was wholly paid by [Loadhog]. [Loadhog] invoiced [Gripple], by way of recharge, in respect of the salary costs of Mr Facey that were to be met by [Gripple]."
The Commissioners' Decision
"10. We the Commissioners heard the appeal and decided:
10.1 The appeal of [Gripple] should be refused. We heard that Mr H D Facey is a director of [Gripple] and also a director of a subsidiary company [Loadhog].
10.2 For several years [Gripple] had claimed research and development tax relief under the Schedule in connection with remuneration paid to Mr Facey. During this time Mr Facey was a director of only [Gripple].
10.3 Mr Facey became a director of [Loadhog] at the time [Loadhog] was created. He provided approximately half of his time to [Gripple] and half of his time to [Loadhog]. For convenience, his salary was paid solely by [Loadhog] and [Loadhog] invoiced [Gripple] for the services of Mr Facey to recover one half of Mr Facey's salary and national insurance contributions.
10.4 HMRC sought to disallow the claim for R & D relief by [Gripple] by finding that Mr Facey was an externally provided worker provided by Loadhog to Gripple. As a result of Mr Facey being a director, Gripple could not claim the R & D allowance due to the provisions of the Schedule. HMRC also reviewed whether the payments were a staffing cost or expenditure on subcontracted R & D but the payments did not qualify under either of those requirements.
10.5 Having regard to the above facts we had sympathy for [Gripple]. Having looked at the legislation, we asked the parties to consider an alternative: that Loadhog acted only as a payment or salary agent in respect of one half of the salary paid to Mr Facey. We heard representations from both parties on this point.
10.6 It was with reluctance that we found in favour of HMRC in the current circumstances."
Discussion
"This group is virtually the same as a partnership in which all the three companies are partners. They should not be treated separately so as to be defeated on a technical point. They should not be deprived of the compensation which should justly be payable for disturbance. The three companies should, for present purposes, be treated as one, and the parent company D. H. N. should be treated as that one. So D. H. N. are entitled to claim compensation accordingly. It was not necessary for them to go through a conveyancing device to get it."
Lord Denning's reference to a conveyancing device was a reference to the fact that the companies could easily have arranged matters (by conveying the land to the parent company) in such a way as to put themselves in an unassailable position to claim not only the value of the land but also compensation for disturbance: see 858 E – G. Goff LJ agreed with Lord Denning MR, but emphasised that he did so in reliance on the particular facts of the case: see 861 D – E. Shaw LJ also stressed "the complete identity of commercial interest and personality" between the three companies at 867 D – E.
"It is true that it was paid over at one stage as purchase price for shares, and it is true that one cannot normally identify money, but in the present case you can; you do not need to get behind the corporate veil to perceive and know that the £25,000 which went in as purchase price for shares came out on the instant in the form of the loan to Lodestar. In my judgment, on the wording of section 156, one does not need to strip aside the corporate veil if you find that emoluments, which means money, come in at one end of a conduit pipe and pass through certain traceable pipes until they come out at the other end to the taxpayer."
Conclusion