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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 >> Patersons of Greenoakhill Ltd v HM Revenue & Customs [2016] EWCA Civ 1250 (07 December 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/1250.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 1250, [2017] 1 WLR 1210, [2017] Env LR 24, [2016] WLR(D) 654, [2017] WLR 1210, [2017] STI 33, [2017] STC 225 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(Tax and Chancery Chamber)
Mrs Justice Rose
[2014] UKUT 0225 (TCC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE BLACK
and
LADY JUSTICE KING
____________________
Patersons of Greenoakhill Limited |
Appellant |
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and - |
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The Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs |
Respondent |
____________________
Melanie Hall QC and Simon Charles (instructed by HMRC) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 14 -15 June 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN:
RELEVANT LEGISLATION ABOUT LT
(2) A disposal is a taxable disposal if—
(a) it is a disposal of material as waste,
(b) it is made by way of landfill,
(c) it is made at a landfill site, and
(d) it is made on or after 1st October 1996.
(1) A disposal of material is a disposal of it as waste if the person making the disposal does so with the intention of discarding the material.
(2) The fact that the person making the disposal or any other person could benefit from or make use of the material is irrelevant….
RELEVANT LANDFILL TAX CASE LAW
27 The commissioners also submitted that there was nothing in the statute which suggested that material which had been discarded as waste ceased to be waste because it had been successfully recycled. That submission is contrary to common sense. Take material which is thrown away. That is waste. Melt it down and mould it into a spare part for a machine and it is not waste. There need be no change in chemical substance to convert waste into a useful product. It is the act of recycling which is important. This is recognised by Parliament in its drive to promote recycling rather than disposal and is recognised by the cumulative effect of section 40(2).
28 The commissioners accept that their argument leads to the result that companies such as Parkwood will be liable for tax if they use recycled material for site engineering or building purposes, whereas they would not be liable for tax if they used fresh materials. That cannot have been the intention of Parliament when they introduced the landfill tax. The purpose of the legislation was to tax waste material deposited at landfill sites and not to tax deposits at landfill sites of useful material produced from waste material.
…
30….. the tax bites upon the person who discards not who recycles.
...the question posed by s.64(1) is whether WRG then intended to discard the materials. The word "discard" appears to me to be used in its ordinary meaning of "cast aside", "reject" or "abandon" and does not comprehend the retention and use of the material for the purposes of the owner of it. I agree with counsel for WRG that s.64(2) does not apply in such circumstances because there is, at the relevant time, either no disposal or no disposal with the intention of discarding the material…Recycling may indicate a change in the relevant intention but is not an essential prerequisite; re-use by the owner of the material for the time being may do likewise….It may be that the economic circumstances surrounding the acquisition of the materials in question by the ultimate disposer of them will cast light on his intention at the relevant time. They cannot, as I see it, affect the decision on this appeal because the use of the relevant materials by WRG is clear and such use is conclusive of its intention at the relevant time by whatever means and on whatever terms WRG acquired them.
DECISIONS OF THE TRIBUNALS
Decision of the FTT
23. The FTT's essential conclusions were as follows:
i) Parkwood and WRG were distinguishable because they dealt with inert material which could be separately identified (FTT Decision, §232).ii) Patersons' case was weaker than those of the LSOs in those cases because the process of decomposition does not reduce the amount of landfill (FTT Decision, §233).
iii) The biodegradable material is not recycled and methane is a by-product of it which may not occur without the addition of leachate (FTT Decision, §§234, 235).
iv) "Material" must be tangible (FTT Decision, §236).
v) The fact that Patersons uses the methane does not mean that it uses the materials deposited in the landfill (FTT Decision, §237).
vi) WRG is also distinguishable because it does not deal with the situation where the material in the landfill site is not used (FTT Decision, §238).
vii) Patersons makes a profit out of what its regulatory obligation requires it to do (FTT Decision, §239).
viii) Exemption in the circumstances of this case would defeat the object of LT (FTT Decision, §240).
ix) It would be too difficult to assess the amount of tax due in respect of landfill if Mr Cordara is correct (FTT Decision, §242). Patersons' proposals here were "unworthy of consideration" (FTT Decision, §243).
x) Patersons' submissions would mean that it would simultaneously have two intentions: to acquire waste from its customer for landfill to put it in the void, and to use it to make electricity. It cannot have two different intentions at the same time (FTT Decision, §§244-5).
The UT's decision
i) As the FTT held, Parkwood was distinguishable. WRG was also distinguishable because the material in that case was used.ii) As in WRG, the material in this case was the biodegradable material which occupied "mass and space" (UT Decision, §33).
iii) It was not, as the FTT held, diverted from landfill in WRG because it was used as daily cover in the void (UT Decision, §34).
iv) Three relevant propositions could be deduced from WRG:
(a) the fact that material goes into the void by way of landfill does not of itself mean that it is discarded for the purposes of section 40;(b) the fact that the LSO uses material to comply with a regulatory obligation does not of itself mean that it has no intention to discard it, nor does it prevent an intention to use the material rather than to discard it; and(c) the fact that the material will be left in the void after it has performed the useful function for which it was put in there and is therefore, at that point, abandoned does not mean that there is an intention to discard at the moment it is put into the void (UT Decision, §34).v) Section 64 FA 96 did not require the LSO to retain or separate out some part of the material from the rest before it can be said not to be discarding the waste (UT Decision, §42). The RM separation factor was only an indication that there is an intention to use that retained matter for a different purpose (UT Decision, §43).
vi) If Patersons had "used" the deposited material, Patersons was required to use the methane under the terms of its licence. The FTT had made an unassailable finding that all its actions were pursuant to its obligations under the licence (UT Decision, §§49 to 62). However, Patersons could "use" material even though it was acting under an obligation in its licence (UT Decision, §64).
vii) It was not relevant that there was no exemption for biodegradable material (UT Decision, §66).
viii) It was not relevant to take into account the difficulties of assessing the amount of the tax. The UT accepted that it would be virtually impossible to work out precisely for each actual tonne of material how much was biodegradable but a formula could be used (UT Decision, §§68 to 77).
ix) Environmental policy had only a limited role to play in the construction of the clear wording of the statute. Patersons' activity did not achieve the primary policy goal behind landfill tax, which is to reduce the amount of waste deposited in landfill. In so far as there is a policy that landfill gas should go to generating electricity rather than being flared, that goal was achieved both by imposing a requirement for landfill site operators to do so and by allowing them to keep the money made from the profitable sale of the gas. There is no other policy reason to give them the additional benefit of a tax relief. It is regarded as more beneficial to the environment if biomass is diverted from landfill and used to generate electricity either in incinerators or in anaerobic digesters (UT Decision, §§78 to 81).
SUBMISSIONS AND CONCLUSIONS
But one would not normally say that the gardener 'uses' the rain to water the garden during the winter when all that happens is the rain falls onto the garden and soaks the plants. She certainly benefits from the natural falling of the rain but she is not 'using' the rain in the ordinary sense of that word. (Judgment, paragraph 45)
any disposition or dispositions of property, whether effected by instrument, by parol or by operation of law, or partly in one way and partly in another, whereby the property is for the time being—
(a) held in trust for persons in succession…
9. Landfill tax was introduced as from 1 October 1996 by the Finance Act 1996 . The tax is a creature of domestic statute in that it is not a tax required under any provisions of Community law. However the United Kingdom does have obligations in Community law to take appropriate steps to encourage the prevention, recycling and processing of waste under Council Directive 75/442/EEC . The Environmental Protection Act 1990 is the key piece of domestic legislation enacted to meet this obligation. Landfill tax can therefore be seen as a separate domestic initiative aimed at protecting the environment and securing the ambitions of the Directive.
10 A government White Paper of December 1995 entitled "Making Waste Work" (Cm 3040) preceded the imposition of landfill tax. It examined the strategies to be adopted to reduce the environmental impact of waste disposal. So far as landfill was concerned, three main objectives were set out. First, to reduce the amount of waste; second to reduce the amount of material going to landfill and third to place the cost of landfill on the person disposing of the waste. In that way waste producers would become aware of the cost of their activities. The central purpose of the landfill tax was stated to be
"to ensure that landfill costs reflect environmental impact thereby encouraging business and consumers in a cost effective and non-regulatory manner, to produce less waste; to recover value from more of the waste that is produced; and to dispose of less waste in landfill sites."
Lady Justice Black
Lady Justice King: