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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 >> Inland Revenue v George [2003] EWHC 318 (Ch) (27 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2003/318.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 318 (Ch), [2003] STI 297, [2003] BTC 8037, [2003] WTLR 471, [2003] STC 468 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
(REVENUE)
Strand, London,WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE COMMISSIONERS OF INLAND REVENUE | Appellants | |
- and - | ||
PHILIP WILLIAM GEORGE | ||
IVOR BERNARD LOOCHIN | ||
(As Executors of the Will of | ||
ELSIE FANNY STEDMAN, DECEASED) | Respondents |
____________________
Mr G R A Argles (instructed by Birkett Long for the Respondents)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Laddie
Introduction
"(1) Where the whole or part of the value transferred by a transfer of value is attributable to the value of any relevant business property, the whole or that part of the value transferred shall be treated as reduced -
(a) in the case of property falling within section 105(1)(a) … below, by 100% …"
"(1) Subject to the following provisions of this section…in this Chapter "relevant business property" means, in relation to any transfer of value, -
(a) property consisting of a business or interest in a business,
(b) securities or a company which are unquoted and which either by themselves or together with other such securities owned by the transferor and any unquoted shares so owned gave the transferor control of the company immediately before the transfer;
(bb) any unquoted shares in a company …
(3) A business or interest in a business, or shares in or securities of a company, are not relevant business property if the business or, as the case may be, the business carried on by the company consists wholly or mainly of one or more of the following, that is to say, ... making or holding investments."
The Company's business
"5. …..The Company carries on eight activities which are described in detail in Mrs Purcell's statement but can be summarised as follows.
(1) The residential homes park. At the time of the deceased's death this consisted of 167 mobile homes. The caravans are owned by the residents and not by the company. The residents receive connections to sewerage, water, electricity and, if required, calor gas which is supplied either by bottled gas or by the hire of mini gas tanks. The company arranges bulk supply of electricity and calor gas for resale to residents. All electrical installations on the site after the powerhouse to which the mains electricity supply is made belong to, and are maintained by, the Company. The company reads each resident's electricity meter monthly and invoices residents. The Company recovers the cost of electricity for street lights and the office and club in the charge it makes for electricity to the residents. The Company stores gas bottles for supply to residents and invoices residents for deliveries to the gas tanks hired by the Company to residents. It makes a profit on the supply of electricity and gas to residents. Water is supplied to residents at a fixed charge and is paid for by the Company on a metered basis, on which the company makes a profit. The common parts are lighted, the roads are maintained, there is an emergency telephone, fire hydrants, and a visitors' car park. Rubbish is collected weekly and three large skips for garden rubbish are provided for residents and emptied weekly. Residents can use the general store/newsagent which is let at a concessionary rent and not operated by the Company. Residents pay their own general rates and make their own arrangements for telephones. There are car parking spaces and garages available for hire. There is a full-time site manager. A considerable amount of staff time relates to this part of the business; Mrs Purcell apportioned to it 48 per cent of one member and 10 per cent of another member of the office staff, 40 per cent of two full-time, 50 per cent of another working 30 hours per week, 50 per cent of another full-time that seasonal, and either 40 or 50 per cent of the three part-time, members of the maintenance staff and, 40 per cent of the site manager and assistant site manager. The company takes a commission of 10 per cent on sales of caravans on the site. In addition it sells caravans, making a profit on that activity.
(2) Dunton Park Country Club. This operates from a separate building comprising a bar which is open every evening and a suite available for hire to non-members for private functions. Income is also received from fruit machines. Membership is available for a fee to residents and non-residents of the site. Of the 363 residents in 1997/98 117 were members and there were 62 non-resident members and 16 complimentary members. Residents can use the functions week on one afternoon each week. It is common ground that this activity is not part of a business of making or holding investments.
(3) Caravan storage. There is an area for storage of touring caravans when not in use. Agreements for storage are for fixed periods of six months or a year and related to a specific plot, although the Company can move caravans if necessary, for example for maintenance. At the time of the deceased's death there were 443 caravans stored there. There is 24-hour access via a barrier that is operated by a computerised key fob issued to plot holders. All movements are recorded on a computer in the office. The storage area has a high fence and a security guard there throughout the night. The security guard is not required by the agreements with the plot holders that is commercially necessary and satisfies insurance requirements since all caravans are required to be insured by their owners. Caravans stored in this part cannot be occupied. A considerable amount of staff time relates to this part of the business, Mrs Purcell said that 90 per cent of incoming telephone calls related to it and she apportioned to it 50 per cent of five members of the maintenance staff and one member of the office staff, 40 per cent of the site manager and assistant site manager, and 30 per cent of a further full-time member of the maintenance staff. This aspect of the business is liable to VAT.
(4) the office from which the administration is run.
(5) Warehouse and shop. These are separately let..
(6) Fields. These are let on grazing licences to a farmer.
(7) Insurance. The Company has an insurance agency and received commission on insurance sold to residents and owners of caravans stored on the site.
(8) Interest The Company also receives interest on cash balances which is not regarded as a separate business."
Making or holding investments
"The questions involved in determining whether the relief is excluded by s105(3) are these: (a) Does the company have investments? (b) Is it 'holding' investments? (e) Does its business 'consist wholly or mainly' of 'holding investments'?" (paragraph 11)
As Mr McKay, who appears for the Inland Revenue, argues, this appeal is not concerned with the second of these questions.
"The meaning of investment is not its meaning in the vernacular of the man in the street but in the vernacular of the business man. It is a form of income-yielding property which the business man looking at the total assets of the company would single out as an investment." (p 371)
"It is a cardinal principle of United Kingdom tax law that 'income derived from the exercise of property rights properly so called' by the owner of land (freehold or leasehold.) is not income derived from carrying on a trade. The words I have cited come from the speech of Lord Macmillan in Fry (Inspector of Taxes) v Salisbury House Estate Ltd [1930] AC 432 at 468." (p 191)
The scope of a business of making or holding investments
"22. In the present case the business activities of Mrs Moore fell into three categories. Firstly, there were those directed at 'making' the investments, those cover the finding of tenants, the negotiations over rent, the granting of the leases and the taking of the decision as to whether to accent a surrender or to allow an assignment … Secondly there were compliance activities which the Moores had to carry out as landlords, such as keeping the exterior painted and in good repair. The activities in those two categories were clearly activities of or attributable to the making or holding of investments. The third category covered the management activities summarised in para 8 above. The Moores were actively involved in these and these continued after Mr Moore's death, though at a reduced level. The purpose of these was to keep up the standards of the whole investment property. But they were in no way productive of any income other than rent, nor were they designed to produce any separate income. This third category of activities covers, in my view, activities that were incidents of the business of holding investments.
23. Thus, active though Mrs Moore's business was, none of the activities that had anything to do with the property were concerned with anything other than the making or holding of investments. To express the point positively, there were all part and parcel of the business of making or holding investments. The property is therefore excluded from ranking as qualifying business property by the words of exclusion in s105(3)"
"... the Governors of the Rotunda are, in my opinion, engaged in the business of letting for reward their rooms heated, lighted and furnished with seats in the manner described in the third paragraph of the Case Stated, and cleaned, managed and regularly controlled by their servant, the keeper, as prescribed by the 19th Regulation, for the purpose of providing, through the operation of those who take their rooms, recreation and amusement to such members of the general public as choose to pay for admission. I do not think the services thus given can be regarded as mere incidents attached to the letting of the rooms themselves." ( p592)
Determination of whether the business consists wholly or mainly of making or holding investments
"… In determining what is the business of a company for the purpose of s 130, it is necessary to have regard to the quality, purpose and nature of the company and its activities, and this includes the full circumstances in which the relevant assets are acquired and retained, including the objects clause in the memorandum of association of the taxpayer and the objects of a society such as the society as revealed in its rules. It is relevant to have regard to the actual activities carried on by the taxpayer at the relevant date, but if these are viewed without regard to the taxpayer's past history or future plans they may give only a partial and incomplete picture. The critical question is whether the holding of assets to produce a profitable return is merely incidental to the carrying on of some other business, or is the very business carried on by the taxpayer. In this case the very business of the society is the provision of housing at a return below the market return, but none the less a return producing a profit."
The Decision of the Special Commissioner
"I return to the question: is this aspect of the Company's business [i.e. the running of the residential homes park] the holding of land to produce a profitable return incidental to the carrying on of some other business (which in this case is the provision of services to the residents) or is it the very business carried on by the company?"
Applying the Weston approach to the facts here
"29 I accept Mr Argles' approach of saying that the investment business is that of making a return on the licensing of the site and the right to use the facilities such as water, drainage and electricity that are connected to the particular site. The remaining items, principally maintenance of the common parts, relate to the provision of services and are not the business of holding investments."
Storage Club Gas and Water Sales & Site fees
electricity Commission
Gross 81,732 17,663 25,175 10,955 65,463 235,327
Profit
Net 14,652 (38,425) 19,975 5,755 60,263 65,893
profit