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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Pendragon Plc v HM Revenue and Customs [2013] EWCA Civ 868 (23 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/868.html Cite as: [2013] BVC 414, [2013] EWCA Civ 868, [2014] STC 844, [2013] STI 2568 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(TAX AND CHANCERY CHAMBER)
MR JUSTICE MORGAN AND JUDGE COLIN BISHOPP
[2012] UKUT 90 (TCC)
ON APPEAL FROM THE FIRST-TIER TRIBUNAL (TAX CHAMBER)
JUDGE ADRIAN SHIPWRIGHT AND SHEILA WONG CHONG FRICS
[2009] UKFTT 192 (TC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LADY JUSTICE GLOSTER
____________________
(1) PENDRAGON PLC (2) STRIPESTAR LTD (3) PENDRAGON COMPANY CAR FINANCE LTD (4) PENDRAGON DEMONSTRATOR FINANCE LTD (5) PENDRAGON DEMONSTRATOR FINANCE NOVEMBER LTD (6) PENDRAGON DEMONSTRATOR SALES LTD |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
(instructed by KPMG) for the Appellants
Nigel Pleming Q.C. and Owain Thomas (instructed by the General Counsel
and Solicitor to HM Revenue and Customs) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 29 and 30 April and 1 May 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
Introduction and summary
VAT: the legislation in general, and the policy
"The principle of the common system of value added tax involves the application to goods and services of a general tax on consumption exactly proportional to the price of the goods or service, whatever the number of transactions which take place in the production and distribution process before the stage at which tax is charged.
On each transaction, value added tax, calculated on the price of the goods or services at the rate applicable to such goods or services, shall be chargeable after deduction of the amount of value added tax borne directly by the various cost components.
The common system of value added tax shall be applied up to and including the retail trade stage."
"the taxable amount of supplies of goods referred to in paragraph 2 shall be the profit margin made by the taxable dealer, less the amount of value added tax relating to the profit margin. That profit shall be equal to the difference between the selling price charged by the taxable dealer for the goods and the purchase price."
"Whereas the present situation, in the absence of Community legislation, continues to be marked by the application of very different systems which cause distortion of competition and deflection of trade both internally and between Member States; whereas these differences also include a lack of harmonization in the levying of the own resources of the Community; whereas consequently it is necessary to bring this situation to an end as soon as possible;
Whereas the Court of Justice has, in a number of judgments, noted the need to attain a degree of harmonization which allows double taxation in intra-Community trade to be avoided;
Whereas it is essential to provide, in specific areas, for transitional measures enabling legislation to be gradually adapted;
Whereas, within the internal market, the satisfactory operation of the value added tax mechanisms means that Community rules with the purpose of avoiding double taxation and distortion of competition between taxable persons must be adopted;"
The abuse of rights principle: general
"74. In view of the foregoing considerations, it would appear that, in the sphere of VAT, an abusive practice can be found to exist only if, first, the transactions concerned, notwithstanding formal application of the conditions laid down by the relevant provisions of the Sixth Directive and the national legislation transposing it, result in the accrual of a tax advantage the grant of which would be contrary to the purpose of those provisions.
75. Second, it must also be apparent from a number of objective factors that the essential aim of the transactions concerned is to obtain a tax advantage. As the Advocate General observed in paragraph 89 of his opinion, the prohibition of abuse is not relevant where the economic activity carried out may have some explanation other than the mere attainment of tax advantages."
The Scheme
How the Scheme worked under UK VAT law: the details
"(1) Subject to complying with such conditions (including the keeping of such records and accounts) as the Commissioners may direct in a notice published by them for the purposes of this Order or may otherwise direct, and subject to paragraph (3) below, where a person supplies a used motor car which he took possession of in any of the circumstances set out in paragraph (2) below, he may opt to account for the VAT chargeable on the supply on the profit margin on the supply instead of by reference to its value.
(2) The circumstances referred to in paragraph (1) above are that the taxable person took possession of the motor car pursuant to—
(a) a supply in respect of which no VAT was chargeable under the Act or under Part I of the Manx Act;
(b) a supply on which VAT was chargeable on the profit margin in accordance with paragraph (1) above, or a corresponding provision made under the Manx Act or a corresponding provision of the law of another member State;
(bb) a supply received before 1 March 2000 to which the provisions of article 7(4) of the Value Added Tax (Input Tax) Order 1992 applied;
(c) a transaction except one relating to the transfer of the assets of a business or part of a business as a going concern which was treated by virtue of any Order made or having effect as if made under section 5(3) of the Act or under the corresponding provisions of the Manx Act as being neither a supply of goods nor a supply of services,
(d) a transaction relating to the transfer of the assets of a business or part of a business as a going concern which was treated as neither a supply of goods nor a supply of services if the transferor took possession of the goods in any of the circumstances described in this paragraph."
"(1) Subject to paragraph (2) below, there shall be treated as neither a supply of goods nor a supply of services the following supplies by a person of assets of his business—
(a) their supply to a person to whom he transfers his business as a going concern where—
(i) the assets are to be used by the transferee in carrying on the same kind of business, whether or not as part of any existing business, as that carried on by the transferor, and
(ii) in a case where the transferor is a taxable person, the transferee is already, or immediately becomes as a result of the transfer, a taxable person or a person defined as such in section 3(1) of the Manx Act;
(b) their supply to a person to whom he transfers part of his business as a going concern where—
(i) that part is capable of separate operation,
(ii) the assets are to be used by the transferee in carrying on the same kind of business, whether or not as part of any existing business, as that carried on by the transferor in relation to that part, and
(iii) in a case where the transferor is a taxable person, the transferee is already, or immediately becomes as a result of the transfer, a taxable person or a person defined as such in section 3(1) of the Manx Act.
…
(4) There shall be treated as neither a supply of goods nor a supply of services the assignment by an owner of goods comprised in a hire-purchase or conditional sale agreement of his rights and interest thereunder, and the goods comprised therein, to a bank or other financial institution."
The abuse of right principle: in detail
"I am of the view therefore that the Community law notion of abuse, applicable to the VAT system, operates on the basis of a test comprising two elements. Both elements must be present in order to establish the existence of an abuse of Community law in this area. The first corresponds to the subjective element mentioned by the Court in Emsland [2000] ECR I-11569, but it is subjective only in so far as it aims at ascertaining the purpose of the activities in question. That purpose — which must not be confused with the subjective intention of the participants in those activities — is to be objectively determined on the basis of the absence of any other economic justification for the activity than that of creating a tax advantage. Accordingly, this element can be regarded as an element of autonomy. In fact, when applying it, the national authorities must determine whether the activity at issue has some autonomous basis which, if tax considerations are left aside, is capable of endowing it with some economic justification in the circumstances of the case."
"The prohibition of abuse, as a principle of interpretation, is no longer relevant where the economic activity carried out may have some explanation other than the mere attainment of tax advantages against tax authorities. In such circumstances, to interpret a legal provision as not conferring such an advantage on the basis of an unwritten general principle would grant an excessively broad discretion to tax authorities in deciding which of the purposes of a given transaction ought to be considered predominant. It would introduce a high degree of uncertainty regarding legitimate choices made by economic operators and would affect economic activities which clearly deserve protection, provided that they are, at least to some extent, accounted for by ordinary business aims."
"On the basis of the foregoing analysis I am therefore of the opinion that there is a Community law principle of interpretation prohibiting the abuse of Community provisions, which is also applicable to the Sixth Directive. According to that principle, the provisions of the Sixth Directive must be interpreted as not conferring the rights that might appear to be available by virtue of their literal meaning, when two objective elements are found to be present. First, that the aims and results pursued by the legal provisions formally giving rise to the tax advantage invoked would be frustrated if that right were conferred. Second, that the right invoked derives from economic activities for which there is objectively no other explanation than the creation of the right claimed."
"As regards the second element, whereby the transactions concerned must essentially seek to obtain a tax advantage, it must be borne in mind that it is the responsibility of the national court to determine the real substance and significance of the transactions concerned. In so doing, it may take account of the purely artificial nature of those transactions and the links of a legal, economic and/or personal nature between the operators involved in the scheme for reduction of the tax burden."
"44. Therefore, when it [i.e. the Court] stated, in paragraph 82 of that judgment, that in any event, the transactions at issue had the sole purpose of obtaining a tax advantage, it was not establishing that circumstance as a condition for the existence of an abusive practice, but simply pointing out that, in the matter before the referring court in that case, the minimum threshold for classifying a practice as abusive had been passed.
45. The reply to the first question therefore is that the Sixth Directive must be interpreted as meaning that there can be a finding of an abusive practice when the accrual of a tax advantage constitutes the principal aim of the transaction or transactions at issue."
"In particular, a service must be regarded as ancillary to a principal service if it does not constitute for customers an aim in itself, but a means of better enjoying the principal service supplied."
"As regards the second criterion, the national court, in the assessment which it must carry out, may take account of the purely artificial nature of the transactions and the links of a legal, economic and/or personal nature between the operators involved (Halifax and Others, paragraph 81), those aspects being such as to demonstrate that the accrual of a tax advantage constitutes the principal aim pursued, notwithstanding the possible existence, in addition, of economic objectives arising from, for example, marketing, organisation or guarantee considerations."
"It might have been argued by Customs that the introduction of Suas into the transactions thus preventing Customs from making directions under Schedule 6, paragraph 1 resulted in the accrual of tax advantages contrary to the Sixth Directive and to the domestic legislation including Schedule 6, paragraph 1. This would have involved widening the ambit of the second answer in Halifax somewhat so as to encompass the purposes of national legislation enacted pursuant to a derogation under Article 27 of the Sixth Directive. There is no doubt that Schedule 6, paragraph 1 was enacted under such a derogation, see RBS Leasing & Services (No.1) Ltd and others v Commissioners of Customs and Excise [2000] V&DR 33. Since it was not argued by Mrs Hall that the abuse consisted of low rentals coupled with the introduction of Suas to counter Schedule 6, paragraph 1, not only were there no submissions as to this but no evidence was adduced as to what open market rentals would have been."
"Second, it must also be apparent from a number of objective factors that the essential aim of the transactions concerned is to obtain a tax advantage. The prohibition of abuse is not relevant where the economic activity carried out may have some explanation other than the mere attainment of tax advantages (see Halifax and Others, paragraph 75, and Part Service, paragraph 42)."
"39. That being so, the national court will have to determine, first, whether the contractual terms of the leasing transactions at issue in the main proceedings are contrary to the Sixth Directive and of the national legislation transposing it. That would particularly be the case if the rentals were set at levels which were unusually low or did not reflect any economic reality.
40. Secondly, the national court will also have to determine whether the involvement of an intermediate third party company, in this case Suas, in those transactions is such as to preclude the application of those provisions.
41. In that regard, the national court will have to ascertain whether, as is apparent from certain documents in the case file and as was stated at the hearing, the involvement of Suas in those transactions precluded the Commissioners from applying Paragraph 1 in Schedule 6 to the VAT Act 1994 so far as the transactions were concerned.
42. In that context, Weald Leasing's argument that the principle of prohibiting abusive practices does not apply to breach of Paragraph 1 in Schedule 6 to the VAT Act 1994 because that provision is purely a question of national law cannot be accepted, because that provision was adopted on the basis of Article 27 of the Sixth Directive and forms part of the national legislation implementing that directive.
43. Moreover, the fact that an undertaking which resorts to leasing transactions such as those at issue in the main proceedings does not engage in leasing transactions in the context of its normal commercial operations does not affect the foregoing considerations.
44. A finding that there was an abusive practice is inferred, not from the nature of the commercial operations usually engaged in by the party which made the transactions in question, but from the object and effects of those transactions, as well as their purpose.
45. In those circumstances, the answer to the first and second questions is that the tax advantage accruing from an undertaking's recourse to asset leasing transactions, such as those at issue in the main proceedings, instead of the outright purchase of those assets, does not constitute a tax advantage the grant of which would be contrary to the purpose of the relevant provisions of the Sixth Directive and of the national legislation transposing it, provided that the contractual terms of those transactions, particularly those concerned with setting the level of rentals, correspond to arm's length terms and that the involvement of an intermediate third party company in those transactions is not such as to preclude the application of those provisions, a matter which it is for the national court to determine. The fact that the undertaking does not engage in leasing transactions in the context of its normal commercial operations is irrelevant in that regard."
"Consequently, the answer to the second, third and fourth questions is that the principle of prohibiting abusive practices does not preclude the right to deduct VAT, recognised in Article 17(3)(a) of the directive, in circumstances such as those of the main proceedings, in which a company established in one Member State elects to have its subsidiary, established in another Member State, carry out transactions for the leasing of goods to a third company established in the first Member State, in order to avoid a situation in which VAT is payable on the sums paid as consideration for those transactions, the transactions having been categorised in the first Member State as supplies of rental services carried out in the second Member State, and in that second Member State as supplies of goods carried out in the first Member State."
"In this regard, what is referred to in Emsland as the subjective element of the abuse does not affect the interpretative nature of the Community law notion of abuse. In Emsland the Court linked that subjective element to the finding that the situation giving rise to the application of a certain Community rule was purely artificial. In my view, that finding of artificiality should not be based on an assessment of the subjective intentions of those claiming the Community right. The artificial nature of certain events or transactions must certainly be determined on the basis of a set of objective circumstances verified in each individual case. This is, furthermore, in line with the Court's reference, again in Emsland, to the 'sole purpose' of an activity or behaviour as a central element supporting the conclusion that there has been an abuse of Community law. When the Court takes the view that an abuse exists whenever the activity at issue cannot possibly have any other purpose or justification than to trigger the application of Community law provisions in a manner contrary to their purpose, that is tantamount, in my view, to adopting an objective criterion for the assessment of the abuse. It is true that those objective elements will reveal that the person or persons engaged in that activity had, most likely, the intention of abusing Community law. But it is not that intention that is decisive for the assessment of the abuse. It is instead the activity itself, objectively considered. In that regard, suffice it to imagine, by way of example, a case where A confines himself without further reflection to following the advice of B and to carrying out an activity for which there is no explanation other than securing a tax advantage for A. The fact that A did not have any subjective intention of abusing Community law will certainly not be material for the assessment of the abuse. What matters is not the actual state of mind of A, but the fact that the activity, objectively speaking, has no other explanation but to secure a tax advantage."
"27. In order to identify the key features of a contract ... we must go beyond an abstract or purely formal analysis. It is necessary to find the contract's economic purpose, that is to say, the precise way in which performance satisfies the interests of the parties. In other words, we must identify the element which the legal traditions of various European countries term the cause of the contract and understand as the economic purpose, calculated to realise the parties' respective interests, lying at the heart of the contract. In the case of a lease, as noted above, this consists in the transfer by one party to another of an exclusive right to enjoy immovable property for an agreed period.
28. It goes without saying that this purpose is the same for all the parties to the contract and thus determines its content. On the other hand, it has no connection with the subjective reasons which have led each of the parties to enter into the contract, and which obviously are not evident from its terms. I have drawn attention to this point because, in my view, failure to distinguish between the cause of a contract and the motivation of the parties has been the source of misunderstandings, even in the cases under consideration here, and has complicated the task of categorising the contracts."
The proper approach of the appellate body
"In effect it lays down the limits within which it would be permissible to say that a "trade" as interpreted by section 237 of the Act does or does not exist. But the field so marked out is a wide one and there are many combinations of circumstances in which it could not be said to be wrong to arrive at a conclusion one way or the other. If the facts of any particular case are fairly capable of being so described, it seems to me that it necessarily follows that the determination of the Commissioners, Special or General, to the effect that a trade does or does not exist is not "erroneous in point of law"; and, if a determination cannot be shown to be erroneous in point of law, the statute does not admit of its being upset by the court on appeal. I except the occasions when the commissioners, although dealing with a set of facts which would warrant a decision either way, show by some reason they give or statement they make in the body of the case that they have misunderstood the law in some relevant particular."
"I think that the true position of the court in all these cases can be shortly stated. If a party to a hearing before commissioners expresses dissatisfaction with their determination as being erroneous in point of law, it is for them to state a case and in the body of it to set out the facts that they have found as well as their determination. I do not think that inferences drawn from other facts are incapable of being themselves findings of fact, although there is value in the distinction between primary facts and inferences drawn from them. When the case comes before the court it is its duty to examine the determination having regard to its knowledge of the relevant law. If the case contains anything ex facie which is bad law and which bears upon the determination, it is, obviously, erroneous in point of law. But, without any such misconception appearing ex facie, it may be that the facts found are such that no person acting judicially and properly instructed as to the relevant law could have come to the determination under appeal. In those circumstances, too, the court must intervene. It has no option but to assume that there has been some misconception of the law and that, this has been responsible for the determination. So there, too, there has been error in point of law. I do not think that it much matters whether this state of affairs is described as one in which there is no evidence to support the determination or as one in which the evidence is inconsistent with and contradictory of the determination, or as one in which the true and only reasonable conclusion contradicts the determination. Rightly understood, each phrase propounds the same test. For my part, I prefer the last of the three, since I think that it is rather misleading to speak of there being no evidence to support a conclusion when in cases such as these many of the facts are likely to be neutral in themselves, and only to take their colour from the combination of circumstances in which they are found to occur."
"7. Although Mr Vajda QC for HMRC opened the appeal by attacking the judgment of Warren J rather than concentrating upon the decision of the tribunal (which of course he contended was correct) in the end counsel were agreed that what really mattered was whether the decision of the tribunal was wrong in law. For it is the tribunal which is the primary fact finder. It is also the primary maker of a value judgment based on those primary facts. Unless it has made a legal error in that in so doing (e.g. reached a perverse finding or failed to make a relevant finding or has misconstrued the statutory test) it is not for an appeal court to interfere. This has been said in other contexts e.g. Osmani v London Borough of Camden [2004] EWCA Civ 1706 at [34], ('… the main focus of attention on a second appeal such as this should be on the decision of the Council rather than that of the County Court Judge on appeal' per Auld LJ and Maloba v Waltham Forest London Borough Council [2007] EWCA Civ 1281 at [19], [2008] 1 WLR 2079 per Toulson LJ). The same applies for the same reasons to appeals from this tribunal.
8. The effect of this principle in this case is that although P&G is the respondent to this second appeal, in reality it is necessary for P&G to show that the tribunal erred in law. The judge held that it had. Of course his reasons why need to be examined, but in the end the focus is on the tribunal decision."
"73. The tribunal's decision in favour of Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs ('HMRC') was not an absolute answer to a pure question of fact or to a pure question of law. It was a judgment of mixed fact and law on the classification of Regular Pringles for value added tax ('VAT') purposes. 'Similar to' and 'made from' are loose-textured concepts for the classification of the goods. They are not qualified by words such as 'wholly' or 'substantially' or 'partly' which have crept into the legal arguments. Those words are not in the legislation itself. The tribunal's conclusions were on matters of fact and degree linked to comparisons with other goods and related to the composition of the goods themselves. Some aspects of the similarity of Regular Pringles to potato crisps are close to the centre, others are on the fringes. This exercise in judgment is pre-eminently for the specialist tribunal entrusted by Parliament with the task of fact finding and with using its expertise to make the first level decision, subject only to appeal on points of law.
74. For such an appeal to succeed it must be established that the tribunal's decision was wrong as a matter of law. In the absence of an untenable interpretation of the legislation or a plain misapplication of the law to the facts, the tribunal's decision that Regular Pringles are 'similar to' potato crisps and are 'made from' the potato ought not to be disturbed on appeal. I cannot emphasise too strongly that the issue on an appeal from the tribunal is not whether the appellate body agrees with its conclusions. It is this: as a matter of law, was the tribunal entitled to reach its conclusions? It is a misconception of the very nature of an appeal on a point of law to treat it, as too many appellants tend to do, as just another hearing of the self-same issue that was decided by the tribunal."
The decision of the First-Tier Tribunal
"From the evidence which we have seen and heard we find as a fact considering matters objectively and not subjectively that in the particular circumstances of this case the essential aim of the transactions was to obtain finance and not to obtain a tax advantage. The real substance and significance of the transactions was the obtaining of finance. This puts it in Mr Pleming QC's non-abusive box and we so find."
"51. We have carefully considered the position here in the light of these objective factors and all the circumstances of the case from an objective perspective. We consider that the obtaining of finance in all the circumstances of the case was the predominant, principal or a central aim of the transactions and we so find as a primary fact on the basis of objective factors.
52. This was clearly the case for the first tranche and we consider it also to be the case, though less certainly, for the second tranche. This is not to suggest that we are wavering as to the finding concerning the second tranche. We are not because the shortening was because of Budget uncertainty and not because finance was not needed. Again we find this on the basis of objective factors.
53. We find, having considered all the evidence and circumstances, that it is not "… apparent from a number of objective factors that the essential aim of the transactions concerned is to obtain a tax advantage." The essential aim was finance."
"The FTT decided otherwise. We are not legally able to reverse the decision of the FTT and give effect to our own conclusion unless the FTT committed an error of law in reaching its conclusion. We consider that the decision of the FTT on this question was wrong. We also consider that the issue as to the essential aim of the transaction was not an issue as to the primary facts but one which was, at least in part, an issue of law. Accordingly, we consider the FTT's decision was wrong in law. If it were necessary for us to do so, we would hold that the FTT's decision was plainly wrong and was only consistent with its having committed an error of law in its approach. We consider that we can see how and why the FTT reached a conclusion which we have held was plainly wrong. The FTT do not refer to matters which we regard as of central importance, namely, the scale of the tax advantage and the fact that the finance was relatively expensive at a time when Pendragon had unused committed facilities. It is conspicuous that the FTT did not provide in its decision a comprehensive description of the arrangements, nor a detailed analysis of them, and in consequence focussed on the fact that finance was obtained, rather than on the fact that the obtaining of finance was subordinate to the essential aim of obtaining a tax advantage. Further, the FTT must have under-estimated the difficulty of leaving out of account much of what Mr Forsyth had said and of confining themselves to objective factors which would have occurred to a reasonable observer. The fact that the FTT said that it was determining the essential aim of the transaction "as a primary fact" does not prevent the Upper Tribunal reversing that finding but rather serves to emphasise that the FTT did not understand the task before it as involving an objective assessment of essential aim. The background facts may have been primary facts but an assessment of aim by reference to objective factors is not a primary fact. A finding as to Mr Forsyth's state of mind may have been a primary fact but that was not a directly relevant matter. The FTT appears also not to have appreciated that the essential aim of the lender might have been different from the essential aim of the transaction. No doubt, the lender did intend to lend money and obtain security by entering into documents which were effective to provide such security but we do not regard that as the essential aim of the transaction. Finally, it is likely that the FTT lost sight of the fact that it was not enough for Pendragon to show that the transactions produced real commercial consequences where those were collateral matters which did not detract from the essential aim of obtaining a tax advantage; the reference in paragraph 173 of its decision to "some autonomous justification" suggests that this is so. It is not necessary for us to determine whether these explanations as to how and why FTT reached a conclusion which was plainly wrong themselves disclose further separate errors of law, although we incline to the view that at least some of them do. In our judgment, the ultimate decision of the FTT was plainly wrong and therefore the FTT committed an error of law in reaching that conclusion. Even if the decision of the FTT involved a multi-factorial valuation judgment, we are satisfied that its decision ought to be reversed."
Mr Forsyth's evidence
"In our view, much of the evidence of Mr Forsyth was cast in a way which focussed on what he said were his motives and his reasons. Cast in that way, the evidence went directly to inadmissible subjective matters. On the other hand, we can see that if the evidence had been drafted in a different way, Mr Forsyth could have drawn on his own involvement in the transactions to identify the considerations which would have influenced reasonable commercial people, acting in the circumstances in which Pendragon actually found itself at the relevant time. That would have been material to the objective assessment which was required to determine the essential aim of the transaction."
"In the event, the FTT received all of Mr Forsyth's evidence. It seems to us that this placed the FTT in a most difficult position. It had to guard against being directly influenced by the considerable amount of evidence given by Mr Forsyth as to subjective matters but, perhaps, it could try to distil from that evidence the different evidence which could have been given as to the type of considerations which, objectively assessed, would have been in the minds of reasonable commercial people in the actual circumstances. The decision of the FTT contains passages (notably at paragraphs 58 - 59, 172 – 174 and 180) where they state that they would leave out of account Mr Forsyth's subjective views and look instead at what an outsider, knowing the relevant facts, would have objectively thought. However, the difficulty of the exercise, given the unhelpful way in which the evidence was presented, should not be under-estimated."
"in relation to the large part of it which was inadmissible, whether Mr Forsyth's evidence can easily or safely be used in order to help with an assessment of the objective matters which would be considered by a reasonable observer."
"Further, the FTT must have under-estimated the difficulty of leaving out of account much of what Mr Forsyth had said and of confining themselves to objective factors which would have occurred to a reasonable observer."
"1: Sufficient funding in place plus an additional safety margin to cover contingencies "headroom";
2: Ensure that the funding is committed within a range of repayment dates;
3: Avoid dependency on a single source of financing; and
4: Always consider the overriding fact that running out of money means the liquidation or reconstruction of the company. This is a high price to be paid by the employees and other stakeholders of business."
"This was at a time when Pendragon were renegotiating their borrowing facilities. The safety margin in the group's headroom was much smaller than was desirable. Extra sources of funding were thus highly desirable. At that time two 45 day tranches of up to £20m funding with potential VAT savings were even more so from a financing perspective."
"There was also a £20,000,000 term facility agreement between them which was supported by the deed of assignment. This effectively gave an extra £20m facility to Pendragon for 45 days or so potentially in two tranches. This is a significant objective factor to be taken into account in considering the transactions. We consider that objectively this is an important indicator of the commerciality of the transactions and shows that they were not uncommercial operations and we so find. This is not to say that the funding was not done in a VAT efficient way but that is something that the ECJ says is permissible."
"172. We have been careful in considering Mr Forsyth's evidence to look to the commercial realities objectively as to the position of Pendragon and to consider the terms of the transactions.
173. We consider (even ignoring Mr Forsyth's evidence) that the obtaining of finance provided some autonomous basis which if tax considerations are left endows some economic justification in the circumstances of this case and we so find.
174. This is so not because Mr Forsyth said that the company needed finance but from the position of the officious bystander it was clear that the company in this business would need considerable finance available to it. A company in Pendragon's position as regards headroom and gearing in particular would clearly need finance and on the finest terms available."
KPMG's involvement
"KPMG were, we find, engaged to advise on a VAT arrangement. We do not consider that because Pendragon took VAT advice it necessarily follows that the essential aim of the arrangements was abusive."
"We find that Pendragon was fully aware of the VAT position. It would be surprising if they were not. They had a significant in-house tax team and had taken advice from leading accountants and practitioners on the matter. The fact that they took advice does not make the transactions abusive."
"In our judgment, some of the contents of the communications between Pendragon and KPMG are admissible and relevant to the question which needs to be decided as to essential aim. We consider that it is an objective characteristic of the scheme which was implemented that it had been devised by tax advisers to obtain a tax advantage, without regard to any other commercial benefits which might result. However, that characteristic is not of itself conclusive. It is legally possible for a scheme of such a kind to be implemented in a range of different circumstances and so that, in some circumstances, the essential aim of the particular transaction would not be to obtain the tax advantage. One would expect a tax adviser to concentrate on the tax treatment of the arrangements and to leave it to its client to assess the commercial circumstances in which the arrangements might be implemented. Furthermore, the mere fact that a taxpayer takes tax advice as to how to structure an intended transaction does not of itself establish that the essential aim of the transaction is to obtain a tax advantage. The decided cases make it clear that a taxpayer can engage in tax planning and select a permissible method of proceeding which is more tax efficient than alternative methods. Further, we do not consider that the opinions expressed by KPMG as to the likely success of the scheme and whether it was an "aggressive" scheme and whether HMRC would be likely to challenge it are admissible when objectively assessing the essential aim of the transaction. Further, even if such opinions were admissible, we would not regard them as of any real help in assessing the essential aim of the transaction."
Balancing the tax advantage against the commercial advantage
Did the Pendragon Group need the short-term funding facilities?
The elements in the transactions said to be artificial
"When the Hirer has made all the payments under the Hire Agreement to the Owner the Hirer will have the option, seven days after the Hire Agreement ends, of purchasing the Goods from the Owner for the Option to Purchase Price specified in the Agreement Schedule. The Hirer will not have this option if all payments have not been made or if the hiring of the Goods has been terminated. The option will remain open for seven working days only. Until this option has been exercised the Goods remain the property of the Owner and, for the avoidance of doubt at no point during or after the Period of Hire will the Hirer acquire any Ownership in the Goods whether legal, equitable, beneficial, economic or otherwise. An option to purchase fee of £10 will apply per vehicle or such other amount from time to time notified in writing by the Owner and is payable upon exercise of the option to purchase. Title to the Goods will pass from the Owner to the Hirer fourteen days after exercise of the option to purchase."
"It is permitted to arrange affairs to take advantage of the relevant tax provisions provided it is not abusive. Here we find that the financing was necessary but was done in a tax-efficient but non-abusive way. The ECJ has not prevented this. It specifically says that one may choose the more tax-efficient way of carrying out a transaction. We consider that this was what Pendragon did and we find this as a primary fact. The obtaining of finance provided a sufficient autonomous basis and economic justification."
"Given that outside financiers would require security over both the vehicles and the income flow it is not an artificial step to carry out a transfer of the business as a going concern. Given that there was to be a hire of the vehicles drafting an HP contract in such a way as to give the taxpayer the choice of carrying out the normal commercial operation in a tax-efficient way cannot be said to be abusive in the current circumstances. It was not something inserted as a purely artificial step which could be disregarded. The cars were to be sold and leased back such that title to the goods, i.e. the cars and the income (i.e. the rentals), would be in a third-party bank. The vehicles had to be got back and the short-term finance repaid. In the circumstances of this case there was no artificial insertion of steps or the creation of a wholly artificial set of transactions rather the necessary financing was carried out in a tax-efficient way. This seems to be contemplated by the ECJ when discussing how a taxpayer can structure his or her business."
"It was what was described as a 'hybrid agreement' as it was designed to obtain a particular VAT treatment. It provided that title would not pass to the dealership company until a period after payment in full. This is not that unusual in an HP type of agreement nor uncommercial."
Was the First-Tier Tribunal wrong in law, as the Upper Tribunal said?
Conclusion
Lord Justice Lewison
Lady Justice Gloster
Note 1 The paragraph numbering in the original text is incorrect, involving several instances of duplication. I use the correctly renumbered version which appears, for example, in [2010] SFTD 1. [Back]