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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Appeal Commissioners v The Bank of Nova Scotia (Grenada) [2013] UKPC 19 (09 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2013/19.html Cite as: [2013] UKPC 19 |
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[2013] UKPC 19
Privy Council Appeal No 0065 of 2012
JUDGMENT
The Appeal Commissioners (Appellant) v The Bank of Nova Scotia (Respondent)
From the Court of Appeal of Grenada
before
Lord Hope
Lady Hale
Lord Kerr
Lord Reed
Lord Carnwath
JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY
LORD CARNWATH
ON
9 July 2013
Heard on 14 May 2013
Appellant Martin Griffiths QC (Instructed by Stephenson Harwood LLP) |
Respondent Dr Claude Denbow SC James Bristol (Instructed by Blake Lapthorn) |
LORD CARNWATH
Introduction
"Most countries require that the tax be withheld at a fixed rate from all gross payments and distributions made to non-residents. These outflows include interest, dividends, royalties, management charges and other fees. The Revenue is not normally concerned whether the income has actually been remitted to the non-resident. It is sufficient that income accrued and that income was paid or credited at the direction of the payee…" (p 113)
The Income Tax Act
"This Act may be cited as the Income Tax Act and shall apply to –
(a) the assessment of income for the year of assessment 1994 and subsequent years of assessment; and
(b) the deduction of withholding tax from payments made on or after the date on which the Act is passed."
Section 2, which applies "unless the context otherwise requires", defines "tax" as "income tax imposed by this Act . . .", and "withholding tax" as "any tax deducted or deductible pursuant to section . . . 50 . . ."
"person includes an individual, a trust, the estate of a deceased person, the company, a body of persons, a partnership and every other juridical person."
There is a definition of "permanent establishment", which includes "(b) a branch or office". However, it is common ground that it is of no direct relevance to the provisions before us. The only reference in the Act to "permanent establishment" is in section 43 dealing with "international agreements for the avoidance of double taxation".
"(a) any business…
(e) premiums, commissions, fees and licence charges…
(i) any other gains or profits accrued to that person which are not included under any other paragraph of this subsection".
Section 29(2) provides that nothing in subsection (1) shall be construed so as to bring within the meaning of assessable income –
"… any amounts accrued to a non-resident (other than from the carrying on of a business or the exercise of employment) which are liable to withholding tax under section 50."
"50(1) Where a person whether or not engaged in a business in Grenada makes payments to a non-resident person of interest… discounts, commissions, fees, management charge, rent, lease premium, license charge, royalties or other payment whether or not the payer is entitled to deduct such payment in computing chargeable income of a business, the payer shall deduct tax at the rate specified in the third schedule and pay the amount of tax so deducted to the Comptroller within seven days after the date of payment or credit to the payee."
By the third schedule, tax is to be deducted (except as otherwise provided) at the rate of 15% from the actual amount paid.
Facts and issues
"Between 2001 and 2006, the Bank's branch office in Grenada paid seven amounts of money to its head office in Canada, for services the cost of which was incurred outside Grenada.
The payments made by the Respondent's branch office in Grenada to its head office in Canada were as follows:
(1) Computer expenses (IBM contract) - $2,289,780.65
(2) Data centre cost cited in error as Special Service Misc. - $2,609,132.40
(3) Data centre charge out costs - $678,758.00
(4) Card allocations - $418,169.00
(5) Master Card fees - $127,541.00
(6) Visa Merchant transaction fees - $324,686.00
(7) Head Office charges - $6,162,153.98
Total: $12,610,220.03
These amounts were accepted by the Grenada Branch Office as its share of Head Office expenses incurred on its behalf in Canada during the years 2001-2006.
It is not disputed by the Comptroller that these amounts were entirely a reimbursement of a share of expenses and did not include any element of profit to Head Office."
i) whether the bank's branch in Grenada and its head office in Canada were both "persons";
ii) if so, whether the payments made by the branch fell within the expression "fees, management charge . . . or other payment".
The judgments below
"where any person pays to any other person not resident in Antigua and Barbuda mortgage or debenture interest or any rent, annuity or any other annual payment…" (emphasis added)
The Chief Justice held that the difference in wording was critical. He said:
"On the other hand by its specific terms section 50(1) of the Income Tax Act of Grenada charges the payments, provided in that section, that any person who is engaged in business in Grenada makes to a non resident company if the local branch is a company engaged in business in Grenada. It made the payments in issue to a bank that is non resident as it was incorporated in Canada. In my view the Comptroller was correct when he determined that withholding tax is chargeable on the payments which the appellant made to the Canadian bank". (para 25).
On the second issue he held that there was nothing in the words "other payment" to limit it to payments of the same nature as the specific items or to payments in the nature of income (para 19).
"35 I am satisfied that the provisions of the Act dealing with withholding tax are an integral part of the Act and constitute no more than a mechanism for the purpose of collecting taxes on income flows to non-resident persons from income earned within Grenada. The withholding tax provisions do not create some special form of taxation which can be levied upon payments which are not of an income nature. Withholding tax is not a separate and discrete form of taxation which is not governed by the fundamental principles of income tax law. It is an integral part of income tax legislation, providing a mechanism for the collection of taxes on income payments before those payments are handed over to a resident or non-resident and to remit the sums deducted or withheld to the Inland Revenue.
36. There was only one legal entity involved in this case, the Bank of Nova Scotia. It operated in Grenada through a Branch Office. Its Head office was in Canada. The Branch Office could not as a matter of fundamental corporate law be regarded as a legal person engaged in business on its own account in Grenada. The Income Tax Act of Grenada could and did provide for the Grenadian income of the separate Branch Office to be subject to income tax. Those taxes had been paid and no issue arose concerning them. The issue is whether the Branch Office was required by the statute to deduct withholding taxes from a payment made by way of reimbursement of expenses paid or credited to the account of its Head Office in Canada. That it would be obliged to do so if the Grenada branch was a separately incorporated company and if the payments were in the nature of income there can be no doubt. As we have seen in the cases cited above, the distinction between a subsidiary company and a Branch Office is recognised in tax law. A country's parliament may choose to tax a Branch Office in the same way as a subsidiary company, or to tax them differently. The question whether this has been done in a particular country is to be answered only by looking at the plain meaning of the tax law of that country. If there is any ambiguity, recourse can be had to the general purpose and intent of the Act and to other sections that may be helpful. In this case there is no ambiguity. Section 50 of the Grenadian Act is clear and in need of no assistance from other sections of the Act. The definition of "person" in section 2 is clear and does not admit of including the unincorporated Head Office of a foreign bank operating in Grenada. The payments in question, having been a reimbursement of expenses and not having been of income, are not subject to deduction of withholding tax. In any event, the payer and the payee being the same person, section 50 has no application. The payments had not been made to a person within the meaning of that word in the Act."
The submissions
"most generally used to denote what may be termed an entity of assessment, ie the possessor or recipient of an income which the Acts required to be separately assessed for tax purposes."
What matters in the present context is whether one finds a payment being made with a payer and a payee. The branch office was separate from the head office, and required to be registered as such under the companies legislation. It is no misuse of language to describe it as a "person" making a payment. Like the Chief Justice, he distinguished the decision of the High Court of Antigua in the British American Insurance case on the basis of the different wording of the statute. By contrast, he says, the Grenadian statute takes a more flexible approach which is directly applicable to the present situation.
Discussion
"for the purposes of this section a resident branch of a foreign company and its headquarters and other non-resident branches shall be regarded as separate persons carrying on separate businesses."
Without reaching a final view on the meaning of the unamended Grenadian statute, the Board observes that, if payments of this kind are to be brought within the scope of withholding tax, it is preferable that it should be done by specific legislation in order to avoid disputes of the kind that have arisen in this case.
Conclusion