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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Customs & Excise v Venuebest Ltd [2002] EWHC 2870 (Ch) (5 December 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2002/2870.html Cite as: [2002] EWHC 2870 (Ch), [2003] STC 433 |
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Chancery Division
Strand London |
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B e f o r e :
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THE COMMISSIONER OF CUSTOMS & EXCISE | Appellant | |
-v- | ||
VENUEBEST LTD | Respondent |
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190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 020 7404 1400 Fax: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR A YOUNG appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Thursday, 5 December 2002
THE VICE-CHANCELLOR:
"Without prejudice to other Community provisions, member states shall exempt the following under conditions which they shall lay down for the purpose of ensuring the correct and straightforward application of the exemptions and of preventing any possible evasion, avoidance or abuse;
(b) the leasing or letting of immovable property,
excluding (ii) the letting of premises and sites for parking vehicles."
"1. The grant of any interest in, or right over land, or of any licence to occupy the land, other than…
(h) the grant of facilities for parking a vehicle."
"…Mr Lock told us, there were only about ten spaces let out by 4 Hire on contract hire but this has increased by about that number each year until now when of the 90 plus available spaces, up to 70 are at any one time let on contract hire."
Then in paragraph 10 the tribunal recorded the following:
"The working relationship between the two [that is to say, Venuebest and Leicester Central Car Park] is that, as stated, the Appellant operates a contract parking business under partnership and pay and display business. Priority for the spaces is given to the Appellant and there is available to the partnership only such spaces as are at any given time not needed by the Appellant. The Appellant grants contracts for parking for varying length periods and the contracts themselves can be for either five day or seven day parking. Some spaces are thus used for both contract and pay and display parking on different days of the week. There are no set spaces reserved for the Appellant's contract parking, all spaces on the site being available for the Appellant's use. To differentiate those spaces not available for pay and display, the Appellant erects signage to show the spaces reserved for contract parking which, where appropriate, will indicate the availability of an otherwise reserved space for pay and display at weekends."
"Given this and the Commissioners' concession, the nature of the supply from the Appellant to the partnership must be determined by the wording of this agreement. What was supplied to the partnership under the tenancy agreement was 'all those premises known as The Yard'. This is quite clearly an unfettered grant of an interest in land. The demised premises are the entire yard over which by virtue of Clause 1 of the landlord's obligations, the tenant has the right to hold and occupy in its entirety without interruption or disturbance from the landlord."
"What was supplied to the partnership was in the first place an exempt supply of an interest in land, as conceded by Mrs Preston. [She was appearing for the Commissioners of Customs and Excise.] As to whether this amounts to 'the grant of facilities for parking a vehicle' regard again must be had to the terms of the agreement as this is the document which governs the legal relations between the parties. What is granted is the land itself. There is no reference to the grant of car parking facilities. Although the agreement must be construed against the factual matrix known at the time (i.e. that it was used and it was intended it would continue to be used as a car park), the partnership has, under the terms of the agreement, an unfettered use of the land. There is no restriction upon the use to which the partnership would put the land, other than storage. The fact that when taken over by 4 Hire it was laid out 'in a casual way' (Mr Lock in cross-examination) as a car park is immaterial because there is no restriction on change of user. It is perfectly clear from the written terms of the agreement that the partnership could do precisely what they wanted with the land. They could continue to use it as a car park or they could have abandoned that use as soon as they took the lease. The effect of the lease is that the Appellant has given away occupation of the land to the partnership for three years. Upon a proper interpretation of the agreement, the Appellant has in reality transferred to the partnership the right to choose who parks where, so effectively it is with the consent of the partnership that the Appellant continues to carry on its business from The Yard. There is thus quite clearly an implicit signed agreement between the parties under which the partnership allows the Appellant to use such spaces as it wishes to do for its own business. It is not a matter for us to determine the precise nature of that signed agreement or reservation back to the Appellant."
"In summary the VAT status of the supply has to be determined by reference to what was actually supplied - in this case, under the terms of the agreement, a piece of land. On a proper construction of the document which sets out the legal and contractual relationship between the parties, the Appellant provides to the partnership a supply of land, a supply from which the partnership then provides its customers with parking facilities. The Appellant's supply to the partnership is thus in our view an exempt supply of land."
"According to the case law of the Court of Justice, in order to determine the nature of a tactical transaction, regard must be had to all the circumstances in which the transaction in question takes place in order to identify its characteristic features."
"The taxpayer contends that the phrase, 'premises and sites for parking vehicles' in Article 13(B)(b) encompasses only open spaces for the short-term parking of vehicles. On the other hand, the Danish government considers that that phrase, given its normal meaning, encompasses any space in which motor vehicles may be placed or parked, regardless of whether it is open, covered or situated in a building. For its part, the Commission argues that, taken in its context, that phrase includes closed garages with the exception of those which form an undivided part of a letting of immovable property which is, itself, exempt."
"Account should be taken in that regard of the fact that the phrase, 'excluding the letting of premises and sites for the parking of vehicles' in Article 13(B)(b) of the Directive introduces an exception to the exemption laid down in that provision in regard to the leasing or letting of immovable properties. It thus places the transactions which it encompasses under the general rules of the Directive which make all taxable transactions subject to tax, except where exemptions are expressly provided for. That provision thus cannot be interpreted restrictively as meaning that only open parking places to the exclusion of closed garages come within the scope."
"14. However, it should be pointed out that the phrase, 'leasing or letting of immovable property' which is the subject of the exemption laid down in Article 13(B)(b) of the 6th Directive, necessarily also encompasses, in addition to the letting of the property which is the principal subject of the transaction, the letting of all property which is accessory to it.
15. Thus the letting of premises and sites for parking vehicles cannot be excluded from the exemption where the letting thereof is closely linked to the letting of immovable property to be used for another purpose, such as residential or commercial property, which is itself exempt, so that the two lettings constitute a single economic transaction.
16. That is so on the one hand if the parking place and the immovable property to be used for another purpose and a part of the single complex and, on the other, if both properties are let to the tenant by the same landlord.
17. The answer to the first question should therefore be that Article 13(B)(b) of the 6th Directive must be interpreted as meaning that the phrase, 'premises and sites for parking vehicles' covers the letting of all places designed to be used for parking vehicles, including closed garages, but that such lettings cannot be excluded from the exemption in favour of the leasing or letting of movable property if they are closely linked to lettings of immovable property for another purpose which are, themselves, exempt from Value Added Tax."
Thus the effect of that decision is to enjoin the National Court to consider whether the land in question is designed for the parking of vehicles.
"In the course of its business of managing and renting properties in Edinburgh, Trinity Factoring Services Limited ("the company") leased out a number of lock-up garages and converted stables which could be used for the parking of vehicles or for other purposes such as storage. A prospective lessee was asked to state the purpose for which he wished to use the garage or stable. Where a lessee stated that he intended to use the property for parking a vehicle, the company charged and accounted for VAT on the rent. If the lessee stated that he intended to use the property for storage, the company treated the supply as exempt. The Commissioners took the view that whatever the stated intention of the lessee, since the properties could be used for parking a vehicle and the lease did not expressly prohibit such use, the supply had to be treated as the grant of facilities for parking a vehicle, which was excluded from the exemption under item 1(g) of Rule 1, Schedule 6 to the Value Added Tax Act 1983. The Tribunal allowed the company's appeal against an assessment to under-declare the VAT raised on that basis. It applied the test of whether the property had been made available, expressly or by necessary implication, to a person for the sole or principal use of parking a vehicle, and concluded that the purpose of the letting could be ascertained by reference to the agreement reached between the company and a lessee before the supply was made."
From that decision, the Commissioners' appeal to the second division of the Inner House of the Court of Session sitting as the Court of Exchequer in Scotland. The decision of that court, whilst not strictly binding on me, is of course entitled to the greatest possible respect and I will follow it unless I am convinced that it was wrong.
"If it had been stated in the lease that the subjects could only be used for the purposes of domestic storage, then we agree that this would have been an exempt supply. However, where subjects consisting of a lock-up garage or converted stables are let, prima facie, the plain implication must be that facilities have been granted for parking a vehicle. Moreover, even if, prior to entering into the lease, parties had agreed that the purpose of the letting was domestic storage, that would not have precluded the customer from using the facilities for parking vehicles. Even in the case of those leases which bore the statement used for domestic storage, or used for storage, there was nothing in the terms of the lease which restricted the use of the subjects to that particular purpose. In our opinion, where a lease is granted of a lock-up garage or converted stable in unqualified terms, the necessary implication is that there has been a grant of facilities for parking a vehicle. That implication arises from the nature of the premises. In our opinion, the Tribunal erred in holding that the fact that the company and its customers had agreed the purpose of letting prior to the time of supply meant that there had been no grant of facilities for the parking of vehicles. In our opinion, the purpose of the letting must be ascertained by reference to the terms of the lease, having regard to the nature of the subjects and not from any prior agreement which may have been entered into by the company's customers. Whatever had been agreed, there was nothing in the terms of the lease which would preclude the customer from using the premises for what was the implied use, namely parking for a vehicle."