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United Kingdom Upper Tribunal (Tax and Chancery Chamber) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Upper Tribunal (Tax and Chancery Chamber) >> Commissioners for His Majesty's Revenue and Customs v Perenco UK Ltd (PETROLEUM REVENUE TAX - Oil Taxation Act 1975 Schedule 3, paragraph 8) [2023] UKUT 169 (TCC) (19 July 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/TCC/2023/169.html Cite as: [2023] UKUT 169 (TCC) |
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(Tax and Chancery Chamber)
Heard on: 20 and 21 April 2023 |
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B e f o r e :
JUDGE MARK BALDWIN
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HIS MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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PERENCO UK LIMITED |
Respondent |
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For the Appellants: Elizabeth Wilson KC, of counsel, instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor for His Majesty's Revenue and Custom
For the Respondent: John Brinsmead-Stockham KC, of counsel, instructed by CW Energy LLP
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Crown Copyright ©
PETROLEUM REVENUE TAX — Oil Taxation Act 1975 Schedule 3, paragraph 8—Expenditure by gas terminal owner on terminal modifications to comply with environmental regulations—Reimbursement by owners of oil fields using the services of the terminal of a pro rata share of that expenditure pursuant to contractual arrangements—Whether the expenditure was to that extent "met directly or indirectly" by a person other than the terminal owner—no—appeal dismissed
Introduction
Background
The relevant PRT legislation
"(2) Subject to the provisions of this section and section 6A below, for the purposes of this Act the tariff receipts of a participator in an oil field which are attributable to that field for any chargeable period are the aggregate of the amount or value of any consideration (whether in the nature of income or capital) received or receivable by him in that period (and after 30th June 1982) in respect of—
(a) the use of a qualifying asset; or
(b) the provision of services or other business facilities of whatever kind in connection with the use, otherwise than by the participator himself, of a qualifying asset."
"(1) An amount which is a tax-exempt tariffing receipt (see subsection (2) below) does not constitute a tariff receipt for the purposes of the Oil Taxation Acts.
(2) An amount is a 'tax-exempt tariffing receipt' for the purposes of the Oil Taxation Acts if—
(a) it would, apart from this section, be a tariff receipt of a participator in an oil field,
(b) it is received or receivable by the participator in a chargeable period ending on or after 30th June 2004 under a contract entered into on or after 9th April 2003, and
(c) it is in respect of tax-exempt business ..."
"(1) Expenditure shall not be regarded for any of the purposes of this Part of this Act as having been incurred by any person in so far as it has been or is to be met directly or indirectly by the Crown or by any government or public or local authority, whether in the United Kingdom or elsewhere, or by any person other than the first-mentioned person.
(1A) But sub-paragraph (1) above does not apply to any expenditure for which the relevant participator is liable that has been or is to be met directly or indirectly out of a payment made by the guarantor under an abandonment guarantee.
…
(2) In considering, for the purposes of this paragraph, how far any expenditure has been or is to be met directly or indirectly by the Crown or by any authority or person other than the person incurring the expenditure, there shall be left out of account any insurance or compensation payable in respect of the loss or destruction of any asset."
The parties' calculations of Perenco's allowable expenditure in this case
Provisions of the Babbage TPA
The FTT Decision
(1) It was common ground that payments to a participator of amounts that in the hands of the participator constitute tariff receipts/TETRs cannot be regarded as payments that meet directly or indirectly the participator's expenditures in generating those tariff receipts/ TETRs for purposes of paragraph 8 (Decision §70).
(2) The additional amounts paid by Babbage under clause 16 were part of the overall consideration given by Babbage in return for the System Services provided by Perenco pursuant to the Babbage TPA. In other words the additional amounts were "part of the price of the overall bargain". On that basis, the additional amounts were TETRs, and paragraph 8 therefore did not apply to disallow an amount of expenditure on the Freon replacement works equivalent to those additional amounts (Decision §§92, 98).
(3) It was therefore unnecessary to address in detail the other arguments of the parties, which focused primarily on the scope of application of paragraph 8 itself (Decision §99).
HMRC's grounds of appeal
Discussion
(1) In isolation (ignoring paragraph 8) were the additional amounts tariff receipts under s. 6 or TETRs under s. 6A?
(2) In isolation (ignoring ss. 6(2) and 6A) did the additional amounts fall within paragraph 8?
(3) If the answer to both questions (1) and (2) is "yes", can a payment be both a tariff receipt/TETR and a payment falling under paragraph 8? If not, how is the apparent conflict to be resolved?
(4) Having regard to the answers to questions (1), (2) and (3), did the FTT approach the issue before it in the wrong way?
In isolation (ignoring paragraph 8) were the additional amounts tariff receipts/TETRs?
"The words 'in respect of' are difficult of definition, but they have the widest possible meaning of any expression intended to convey some connection or relation between the two subject matters to which the order refers."
"… the identification of the parties' obligations is a matter of contract. But once their obligations have been identified, the nature or classification of those obligations, and in particular whether they answer a particular statutory description, is not necessarily concluded by the contract. … The court is often called upon to decide whether a written contract falls within a particular legal description. In so doing the court will identify the rights and obligations of the parties as a matter of construction of the written agreement; but it will then go on to consider whether those obligations fall within the relevant legal description."
In isolation (ignoring ss. 6(2)/6A) did the additional amounts fall within paragraph 8?
"It seems to me that the truth of this matter was that, although the financing arrangements were somewhat odd, there was a genuine incurring of the expenditure by the taxpayer, who was at risk of having to repay the loans, the advances, made from time to time by Fleming by payment of the expenses, and that had any event occurred which prevented the taxpayer from procuring the grant to Fleming, eventually, of the headlease, plainly and beyond any question the taxpayer would have been liable to repay Fleming all the moneys advanced. In those circumstances it seems to me impossible to say that the moneys advanced by Fleming were in any genuine sense of the words being paid for the work done. Those payments, at the time they were made, were undoubtedly, in my judgment, loans. The loan was discharged by the procuring of the grant of the headlease. In no proper sense did Fleming 'meet' the taxpayer's expenditures. In my judgment the taxpayer's argument is right.
That seems to me to accord with the policy, so far as I can perceive it, of s. 84. The section's reference to meeting the expenditure of another is one which is plainly primarily directed to cases of government grants or local authority contributions and such matters. It includes the reference to expenditure being met 'by any person other than' the taxpayer, but that is a tailpiece thrown in to catch any other such meeting of expenditure. The concept as it seems to me of that whole subsection is of the provision of money to meet expenditure by way of, in effect, bounty. 'Bounty' may be an inappropriate way to describe the grants made by a government department, remembering that the government have no money save what they take from taxpayers and then give back to other taxpayers. Nonetheless, it seems to me that a transaction whereby a financier lends money to meet a taxpayer's bills and as a result a valuable asset is transferred from the taxpayer to the financier is not appropriately described as the financier 'meeting' the expenditure of the taxpayer. He has bought an asset, paid for an asset, or whatever other phrase of the English language one may care to use, but he has not, in my judgment, met the expenditure of the taxpayer in any proper use of that term in the context in which it appears."
Can a payment be both a tariff receipt/TETR and a payment falling under paragraph 8?
The FTT's approach to the issue before it
Disposition
(1) The FTT did not err in law in concluding that the additional amounts did not fall within paragraph 8, and did fall within ss. 6(2)/6A as being tariff receipts/TETRs.
(2) While we have articulated our reasoning slightly differently, there is no flaw in the FTT's approach to the analysis amounting to an error of law; and even if there was, given our conclusion above, it would not cause us to remake the FTT's decision.
RELEASE DATE: 20 July 2023