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Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> O Culachain (Inspector of Taxes) v. Stylo Barratt Shoes Ltd. [2004] IESC 20 (31 March 2004)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2004/20.html
Cite as: [2004] IESC 20

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O Culachain (Inspector of Taxes) v. Stylo Barratt Shoes Ltd. [2004] IESC 20 (31 March 2004)

     
    THE SUPREME COURT

    Keane C.J.

    Hardiman J.

    Fennelly J.

    95/03

    BETWEEN

    S. Ó CULACHÁIN
    INSPECTOR OF TAXES
    APPELLANT
    AND
    STYLO BARRATT SHOES LIMITED

    RESPONDENT

    [Judgments delivered by Keane C.J. & Fennelly J.; Hardiman J. concurring]

    JUDGMENT delivered the 31st day of March 2004, by Keane C.J.

    I have read the judgment which will be delivered by Fennelly J. I agree with it and the order he proposes. I would merely wish to add some observations as to the somewhat mystifying course these proceedings have taken.

    They began in 1996 when the respondent appealed against the decision of the Inspector of Taxes to refuse to repay the VAT claimed by the respondent in respect of the March / April 1994 VAT period and against the assessment made for the same period in the amount of £17,885.92. The claim for the repayment of the VAT was rejected by the inspector because he was of the view that the transaction was exempt from VAT under the provisions of s. 3(5)(b)(iii) of the Value Added Tax Act, 1972. This was on the basis that the transfer of the premises, together with the fixtures and fittings, was "in connection with a transfer of a business or part thereof" within the meaning of that provision. The Appeal Commissioner ruled against the inspector because he was satisfied that there had been no agreement for the transfer of the business or any part thereof.

    The agreement between the vendors and the respondent was that the purchase price of £1,000,000.00 sterling should be exclusive of VAT and the amount thought to be payable in respect of VAT was paid by the respondent to the vendors. It should then, of course, have been transmitted by the vendors to the revenue but we were told during the hearing that this may not have happened. (It would appear that the vendors shortly thereafter ceased trading.) Whatever the position may have been factually, however, the legal position is not in doubt: if the revenue were correct in their contention that the transaction was exempt from VAT, the result should have been that they did not recover anything in respect of VAT. It is understandable that the inspector should have sought a ruling from the Appeal Commissioner so as to ensure that the law as to VAT was being correctly applied. Although counsel for the appellant was invited to indicate to the court why it was thought necessary, such a ruling having been obtained, to pursue thereafter what was at best a dubious argument which, if successful, would have resulted in a significant loss of tax to the revenue, no satisfactory explanation was forthcoming. Nor was there any explanation whatever as to why, after the inspector had expressed dissatisfaction, the matter was then allowed to rest for nearly six years, until the Case Stated was ultimately signed by the Appeal Commissioner and transmitted to the High Court.

    In the meantime, the High Court had decided in another case (O'Shea [Inspector of Taxes] –v- Coole Parkview Service Station Ltd. [McCracken J.; unreported; judgment delivered 25th May, 2000]) that a similar transaction was not exempt under the same provision. The present case was decided by Kearns J. in favour of the respondent on 14th February, 2003. Undaunted, the appellant pursued an appeal to this court, although on the 27th November, 2003, in Zita Modes Sàrl –v- Administration de L'enregistrement et des domains (Case c-497/01; unreported judgment; 5th chamber) the Court of Justice of the European Union held that a transaction such as this did not come within the exemption in question, admittedly for reasons not entirely the same as those to be found in the decisions of the Appeal Commissioner, McCracken J. and Kearns J.

    Far from accepting that there was no point in wasting the taxpayer's money any further on this curious enterprise, the response of the appellant was to invite the court to send the entire matter back to the Appeal Commissioner. It was presumably envisaged that there would be a further appeal by way of Case Stated in the event of that being unsuccessful, followed by yet another appeal to this court. All this in a case where the law is now so plainly against the appellant that, if by any chance the decision had been in favour of the revenue at any stage, there would unquestionably have been a reference for a preliminary ruling to the Court of Justice of the European Union. The true position, as pointed out by Fennelly J. in his judgment, is that, since the decision in Zita Modes Sàrl, the issue which has involved so much time and money is acte clair.

    It may be that there is some explanation for this extraordinary sequence of events, but I find it disquieting that, if there is, it was never indicated to this court.

    THE SUPREME COURT

    No. 95/03

    Keane C.J.

    Hardiman J.

    Fennelly J.

    BETWEEN

    S. O'CÚLACHÁIN, Inspector of Taxes

    Appellant

    and
    STYLO BARRATT SHOES LIMITED

    Respondent

    JUDGMENT delivered on the 31st day of March, 2004 by FENNELLY J.

    This appeal concerns the application of an exemption from VAT in the case of the transfer of a business. It comes to this Court by way of appeal from a High Court decision on a Case Stated from an Appeal Commissioner.

    VAT was introduced by the Value-Added Tax Act, 1972 in order to give effect to the mandatory provisions of European directives. Though it has since been much amended, the basic provisions of the VAT code are found, to give it its full title, in the Sixth Council Directive 77/388/EEC of 17 May 1977 on the harmonization of the laws of the Member States relating to turnover taxes - Common system of value added tax: uniform basis of assessment. The Directive requires Member States to subject to VAT all supplies of goods and services, and makes a number of special provisions, in particular, exempting the supply of certain goods and services.

    One of these is Article 5(8) of the Sixth Directive, which provides:

    "In the event of a transfer, whether for consideration or not or as a contribution to a company, of a totality of assets or part thereof, Member States may consider that no supply of goods has taken place and in that event the recipient shall be treated as the successor to the transferor. Where appropriate, Member States may take the necessary measures to prevent distortion of competition in cases where the recipient is not wholly liable to tax".

    Ireland exercised the option to provide that, in the cases covered by the article, no supply takes place. Section 3(5) of the Act of 1972 provides in relevant part as follows:

    "(a) The transfer of ownership of goods pursuant to a contract of the kind referred to in subsection (1) (b) shall be deemed, for the purposes of this Act, not to be a delivery of the goods.
    (b) The transfer of ownership of goods—
    (i) [not relevant]

    (ii) [not relevant], or

    (iii) in connection with the transfer of a business or part thereof to another accountable person,

    shall be deemed, for the purposes of this Act, not to be a delivery of the goods … … [remainder not relevant]".

    The transaction at issue in the present case was effected pursuant to a contract in writing dated 9th February 1994 whereby W.J. McManus & Son Limited, a Northern Ireland company, and W.J. McManus & Son (Dublin) Limited, a company incorporated in the State, (collectively called "the vendors") agreed to sell to Stylo Barratt Shoes Limited, an English company, (hereinafter "the taxpayer") a number of shoe shops some of them in Northern Ireland. The tax issue which arises concerns the chargeability to value added tax (VAT) of the sale insofar as it concerned some nine shops in this jurisdiction.

    The total consideration in respect of these premises was £1 million sterling, which was apportioned as follows:

    "Premises (freehold and £714,583.00 + VAT of £40,104.16

    leasehold)

    Fixtures and Fittings £192,708.00 + VAT of £40,468.75

    __________ _________

    Total: £907,291.00 £80,572.91"

    The taxpayer, having paid the above sums to the vendor, would normally have been entitled, as a taxable person, to deduct the VAT as an input credit. In its March/April 1994, VAT return it claimed credit in the amount of £80,572, which resulted in a repayment claim of £62,687, because the claimed credit exceeded the amount of VAT invoiced in the period. The Inspector of Taxes disallowed the deduction in its entirety and instead assessed the taxpayer for VAT in the sum of £17,885.92 based on its return. The taxpayer appealed to the Appeal Commissioner. At an appeal hearing on 17th May 1996, the Appeal Commissioner heard evidence from a Finance Director and an Area Manager for Ireland of the taxpayer company.

    He posited the question for his decision as being whether the transaction, consisting of a sale under the agreement of 9th February 1994, was one upon which VAT was chargeable or whether it was a transaction falling under the statutory provision cited above and, therefore, not a supply of goods.

    The Appeal Commissioner decided that the proper test to be applied was whether there was an agreement for the transfer of a business or part thereof. He also said that, if the answer to that question was "yes", a further question would arise, namely whether the ownership of goods changed in connection with the transfer of a business or part thereof. He held that the answer to the first question was "no." He decided, consequently, that there was no need to deal with the second question.

    Immediately after this determination, the Inspector of Taxes expressed dissatisfaction and duly required a Case Stated for the opinion of the High Court within twenty one days. The Appeal Commissioner duly signed the Case Stated on 25th January 2002 pursuant to the provisions of section 428 of the Income Tax Act, 1967, as applied to VAT by section 25(2) of the Value-Added Tax Act, 1972. No explanation has been provided for the delay of more than five years between the decision of the Appeal Commissioner and the signing of the Case Stated.

    The agreement is appended to the Case Stated and constitutes the principal evidence of the transaction. In addition, the Appeal Commissioner made the following relevant findings:

    The Appeal Commissioner summarised the arguments of the Inspector and of the taxpayer and set out his decision as follows:

    "I, the Appeal Commissioner who heard the appeal, gave my decision in the following terms:-

    I found that, on the basis of the oral evidence and legal documentation, the transaction under the Agreement of the 9th February, 1994, involved the transfer of premises and fixtures and fittings and no more than that.

    There was no attempt by the Company to discover the financial position of McManus or to obtain the business assets or liabilities of McManus (i.e. stock, goodwill, contracts with supplies and others, and relations with bankers were not of interest to the Company).

    I am not in agreement with the arguments of the Appellant that the circumstances surrounding the recruitment of certain of the McManus staff amounted to the effective take-over by the Company of the goodwill of McManus or that the inclusion of a "non-competition" clause in the Agreement of 9th February, 1994, indicated that there had been a transfer of the business or part thereof.

    The Company could have commenced a similar business to that carried on by McManus but this was not the subject of the contract and the Company did not attempt to do so. The business of the Company was directed to a different segment of the market than that of McManus.

    I did not accept that assertion that the correct test to be applied was whether the assets which were being transferred formed part of an undertaking which was active and operating at the time of transfer. Section (3)(5)(b)(iii) of the VAT Act 1972 is concerned with "… the transfer of ownership of goods … in connection with the transfer of a business or part thereof …". I believe this means that the proper test to be applied to is to ask, first, was there an agreement for the transfer of a business or part thereof? If the answer to this is yes then a further question arises: did the ownership of goods change in connection with the transfer of the business or part thereof? Since I have concluded that the answer to the first part of the test is no, I am of the view that I do not need to deal with the second element of the above test".

    The matter came before Kearns J in the high Court.

    It should be said immediately that it was common case before the High Court that the test which the Appeal Commissioner applied was not the correct one. The Inspector had relied particularly on an English decision: Customs & Excise Commissioners v Dearwood Ltd. [1986] STC 327, where it had been held that the correct test of whether a business was transferred as a going concern was whether it "could" be, not whether it "would" be carried on without interruption after the transfer and that the intention of the taxpayer company was irrelevant. However, as was pointed out by Kearns J in the High Court, the relevant legislation in the United Kingdom was worded differently. It expressly envisaged the transfer of a business as "a going concern" and that the transferee be "carrying on the same kind of business..." In addition, McCracken J, in the High Court, in B.D. O'Shea, Inspector of Taxes v Colle Parkview Service Station Ltd (Unreported 25th May 2000) held that "the subsection does not require any formal contract for the transfer of the business, and that it is sufficient to satisfy the subsection if the circumstances are such that the benefit of the business is in fact transferred." The Appeal Commissioner, both in the case which came before McCracken J and in the present one had posed the different question of whether there was an agreement for the transfer of the business.

    To a very large extent, all of these decisions are now irrelevant. Article 5(8) of the Sixth Directive has been definitively interpreted, since the High Court decision, by the Court of Justice in Case C-497/01 Zita Modes Sarl v Administrationde l'enregistrement et des domaines (judgment of 27th November 2003). It might be observed, before considering and applying the most directly relevant terms of the judgment, that the Court, at paragraph 32, repeated that, "like all the exemptions provided for in Article 13 of the Directive, the no-supply rule laid down in Article 5(8) constitutes an independent concept of Community law whose purpose is to prevent divergences in the application of the VAT system from one Member State to another." In the light of this need for uniform interpretation of generally applicable provisions of Community law, it must be doubted whether the English case-law should be distinguished by reference to the different wording of the national-law exempting provision. In fact, the interpretation adopted by McCowan J in the Dearwood case and by McCracken J in that of Colle Parkview Service Station, do not appear to be markedly different. In any event, both have now been overtaken by the Zita Modes decision.

    The principal proposition which emerges from the judgment in Zita Modes is that Article 5(8) is essentially concerned with the transfer of businesses or undertakings and not mere physical assets. This appears, firstly, from paragraphs 39 and 40 of the judgment where the meaning of the Article is explained by reference to its purpose:

    "39. The context of Article 5(8) and the purpose of the Sixth Directive, as set out in paragraphs 36 to 38 of this judgment, make it clear that that provision is intended to enable the Member States to facilitate transfers of undertakings or parts of undertakings by simplifying them and preventing overburdening the resources of the transferee with a disproportionate charge to tax which would in any event ultimately be recovered by deduction of the input VAT paid.

    40. Having regard to this purpose, the concept of a transfer, whether for consideration or not or as a contribution to a company, of a totality of assets or part thereof must be interpreted as meaning that it covers the transfer of a business or an independent part of an undertaking including tangible elements and, as the case may be, intangible elements which, together, constitute an undertaking or a part of an undertaking capable of carrying on an independent economic activity, but that it does not cover the simple transfer of assets, such as the sale of a stock of products".

    Later, at paragraph 44, the Court reiterates its fundamental ruling regarding the nature of a transfer of assets, while adding a requirement that the transferee must intend to operate the business being transferred:

    "However, it is apparent from the purpose of Article 5(8) of the Sixth Directive and from the interpretation of the concept of a transfer, whether for consideration or not or as a contribution to a company, of a totality of assets or part thereof which flows from it, as set out in paragraph 40 of this judgment, that the transfers referred to in that provision are those in which the transferee intends to operate the business or the part of the undertaking transferred and not simply to immediately liquidate the activity concerned and sell the stock, if any."

    I have set out these parts of the judgment of the Court of Justice, in advance of the submissions on the appeal, in order to make it easier to understand the preliminary submission made by counsel for the Inspector. He submitted that, in the light of the decision of the Court of Justice, which was not available at the time either of the hearing before the Appeal Commissioner or that before the High Court, it was appropriate to refer the Case Stated back to the Appeal Commissioner to enable him to amend it by including findings of fact relevant to the terms of the Zita Modes judgment. The relevance of the intention of the transferee had not been foreseen and the Case Stated contains no findings of fact on that subject. Counsel for the taxpayer submitted that the Court was in a position to deal with the matter on the basis of the existing findings and also that there had now elapsed a very long interval of time since the original hearing. The possibility of a reference back had been raised, though in a different context, before the High Court and both parties had urged the judge to continue with the hearing on the basis of the existing facts. The Court decided to continue with the hearing of the appeal but to consider this preliminary point raised by the Inspector as one of the issues when giving its decision.

    Counsel for the Inspector concentrated his attention on the decision of the Appeal Commissioner that the agreement of 9th February 1994 "involved the transfer of premises, fixtures and fittings and no more than that." He submitted that this ruling was perverse and was one which no reasonable commissioner could reasonably make. He said that the Commissioner was not entitled to rely on oral evidence to contradict the written terms of the agreement. He acknowledged that Clause 27 of the agreement provided that: "for the avoidance of doubt it is hereby agreed by and between the parties that the transaction hereby effected is not nor is it to be construed as the purchase or a transfer of a business undertaking." Such provisions are, however, accorded very slight weight as against the substantive provisions of an agreement. He said that a number of provisions demonstrated that the sale involved the transfer of employees of the vendors' business and the sale of the goodwill of the former business.

    He drew attention, firstly, to some references to employees of the vendors. One provision states that the agreement relates to "the Leasehold and Freehold Premises in the Republic of Ireland (and the staff employed thereat)…" The taxpayer also agrees "to employ those staff set out in Schedule X." It also "retains the right for seven days…to decide whether to employ …" certain named employees. The taxpayer did in fact employ 41 former employs of the vendor, as set out in the Case Stated.

    Clause 24 provided that the vendors, subject to a number of exceptions, should not "either on their own account or in conjunction with others whether directly or indirectly be engaged, concerned … … or interested in, or allow their names, or any of them to be used by any business comprising the retail or wholesale sale of footwear or sportswear in the Republic of Ireland for a period of 12 months from the date hereof." Counsel submitted that this clause, principally, but also a brief reference to the use of the vendors' name on the premises for a maximum of five days demonstrated that the transaction involved the sale of goodwill. The fact that no consideration was assigned to the goodwill was irrelevant, since the subsection does not require that there be any consideration for a transaction caught by its provisions.

    Counsel for the taxpayer supported the decision of the Appeal Commissioner. There was no provision for the sale of goodwill. The employees were not transferred, but re-employed independently by the taxpayer company. The Appeal Commissioner rightly drew attention to the absence of any "due diligence" examination, which tended to confirm that no aspect of the former business was being transferred. He contended that the findings of fact made by the Appeal Commissioners are not open to reversal on the well-established grounds stated in Mara (Inspector of Taxes) v Hummingbird Ltd [1982] I.L.R.M. 421 and subsequent cases.

    Conclusion

    The status of findings of fact of the Appeal Commissioners has been most recently considered by this Court in D. A. MacCarthaigh, Inspector of Taxes v Cablelink Ltd

    and others (Unreported 19th December 2003.) In my judgment in that case, with which the other members of the Court agreed, I found it convenient to summarise the principles by reference to the judgment of Blayney J in Ó Cúlacháin v. McMullan Brothers Ltd. [1995] I.R. 217. There he said:

    "1. Findings of primary fact by the judge should not be disturbed unless there is no evidence to support them.

    2. Inferences from primary facts are mixed questions of fact and law.

    3. If the judge's conclusions show that he has adopted a wrong view of the law, they should be set aside.

    4. If his conclusions are not based on a mistaken view of the law, they should not be set aside unless the inferences which he drew were ones which no reasonable judge could draw.

    5. Some evidence will point to one conclusion, other evidence to the opposite: these are essentially matters of degree and the judge's conclusions should not be disturbed (even if the court does not agree with them, for we are not retrying the case) unless they are such that a reasonable judge could not have arrived at them or they are based on a mistaken view of the law".

    It is relevant also to recall the statement of Kenny J in the Hummingbird case that, insofar as the conclusions of the Appeal Commissioner "are based on the interpretation of documents, the court should reverse them if they are incorrect for it is in as good a position to determine the meaning of documents as is the commissioner."

    In the present case, the Appeal Commissioner heard oral evidence from two executives of the taxpayer company. They were part of the material which led him to make his decision. In reality, however, counsel for the Inspector relies almost entirely on the interpretation of the written agreement. If the Court were to accept that the Appeal Commissioner had misinterpreted that agreement, it would probably be open to it to reverse his decision, without departing from the principles laid down in the two cases referred to.

    The essential legal question is whether the transaction effected by the agreement involved, to use the words of the subsection, "the transfer of a business or part thereof." Since that statutory provision is an implementation of an option permitted to the Member States by a provision of Community law, it must be interpreted in the light of the provision permitting it, namely Article 5(8) of the Sixth VAT Directive, which speaks of the transfer of "the totality of assets or part thereof."

    That provision, in turn, has been authoritatively interpreted by the Court of Justice in the Zita Modes case. The court has ruled unambiguously that the provision "covers the transfer of a business or an independent part of an undertaking including tangible elements and, as the case may be, intangible elements which, together, constitute an undertaking or a part of an undertaking capable of carrying on an independent economic activity, but that it does not cover the simple transfer of assets, such as the sale of a stock of products." It has also held that there is a second element to the test, namely that "the transferee intends to operate the business or the part of the undertaking transferred…"

    The Court of Justice was, of course, merely giving a preliminary ruling on the interpretation of Article 5(8) and it remained for the national court to apply the ruling and to make any findings of fact in the light of the applicable provisions of national law. If, as a matter of Irish law, the transfer effected by the agreement of 9th February 1994 constitutes no more than "the simple transfer of assets," it seems clear that Article 5(8) does not apply. It does not meet the first element of the test and it does not matter that there is no express finding regarding intention. For this reason alone, I am satisfied that there is no need to refer the Case Stated back to the Appeal Commissioner for further findings of fact. In this light, it is unnecessary to consider whether the terms of the agreement themselves constitute sufficient evidence of intention.

    In my view, the agreement of 9th February 1994, to quote the Appeal Commissioner "involved the transfer of premises and fixtures and fittings and no more than that." Counsel for the Inspector agreed that, if this finding was correct, it followed from the judgment in Zita Modes, that Article 5(8) did not apply to it. The agreement does not contain any provision for the sale of goodwill. The very limited restraint of trade contained in Clause 24 did not amount to a transfer of goodwill. The fact that the vendors remained entitled to carry on their existing business in the premises they were not selling is perhaps not helpful. There can be a transfer of part of a business or undertaking. A restraint of trade is not to be equated with a sale of goodwill. The former may often accompany the latter, but they are different things. In the present case, the period of the restraint was, in any event, very brief.

    Nor did the arrangements about the re-employing of former employees of the vendor alter the character of the transaction. Arrangements of the kind that took place in this case may possibly involve a "transfer of undertaking" so as to confer certain rights on the employees, but that is not the test here.

    Certain simple key features stand out. The agreement provided for the sale of premises and certain fixtures and fittings. No stock-in-trade, debtors, liabilities or financial, assets of any kind were included. To the extent that both vendor and purchaser were in the retail shoe trade, it was clear that the vendors' business came to a complete halt and was closed down. The taxpayer company started up again using its own stock, having re-employed a number of employees. All the indications both from the agreement and the surrounding circumstances contradict the suggestion that the business was being transferred. Not only was the decision not perverse, it was, in my view, patently correct.

    I am satisfied that, section 3(5)(b), interpreted in the light of the Sixth Directive, did not apply. Since it did not apply, there was a supply of "goods" within the meaning of the Value-Added Tax Acts. I would dismiss the appeal and uphold the decision of the Appeal Commissioner.

    Insofar as this decision involves an interpretation of a provision of Community law, I am satisfied that the matter is acte clair following the decision of the Court of Justice in Zita Modes and this Court is not obliged to refer the matter for preliminary ruling pursuant to Article 234 of the EC Treaty.


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