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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 >> Strand Futures and Options Ltd. v HM Inspector of Taxes [2003] EWHC 67 (Ch) (07 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2003/67.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 67 (Ch), [2003] STI 204, [2003] BTC 344, [2003] STC 331 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London,WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Strand Futures and Options Ltd | Appellant | |
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Peter William Lewis Vojak (HMIT) | Respondent |
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Mr Christopher Tidmarsh QC (instructed by Solicitor of Inland Revenue)
for the Claimant
Hearing dates: 15th - 16th January 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Etherton:
Introduction
The relevant facts
The issue
Representation
Disposal?
The tax position of an individual receiving a distribution
"1. Subject to section 95(1)(a), income tax under this Schedule shall be chargeable for any year of assessment in respect of all dividends and other distributions in that year of a company resident in the United Kingdom which are not specially excluded from income tax, and for the purposes of income tax, all such distributions shall be regarded as income however they fall to be dealt with in the hands of the recipient."
"37(1) There shall be excluded from the consideration for a disposal of assets taken into account in the computation of the gain any money or money's worth charged to income tax as income of, or taken into account as a receipt in computing income or profits or gains or losses of, the person making the disposal for the purposes of the Income Tax Acts."
The rival contentions as to the position of a company recipient
"208. Except as otherwise provided by the Corporation Tax Acts, corporation tax shall not be chargeable on dividends and other distributions of a company resident in the United Kingdom, nor shall any such dividends or distributions be taken into account in computing income for corporation tax."
"The general rule is that it is only permissible to take into account the earlier legislation if the language of the consolidated legislation is ambiguous or obscure or leads to absurdity. In the words of Lord Cooke in R v Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions, ex p Spath Holme Ltd [2001] 2 WLR 15 at 40, a provision is ambiguous if reasonably open on orthodox rules of construction to more than one meaning. But there is no absolute rule. (It may be noted that this was held to be the law by the House of Lords in NAP Holdings UK Ltd v Whittles (Inspector of Taxes) [1994] STC 979 at 987, a decision of the House of Lords not cited in Ex p Spath Holme Ltd). As Lord Bingham said in Ex p Spath Holme Ltd in a passage with which Lord Nicholls and Lord Cooke agreed ([2001] 2WLR 15 at 28):
"…the overriding aim of the court must always be to give effect to the intention of Parliament as expressed in the words used. If, even in the absence of overt ambiguity, the court finds itself unable, in construing the later provision in isolation, to place itself in the draftsman's chair and interpret the provision in the social and factual context which originally led to its enactment, it seems to me legitimate for the court - even, as Lord Simon said, incumbent on it - to consider the earlier, consolidated, provision in its social and factual context for such help as it may give, the assumption, of course, being (in the absence of amendment) that no change in the law was intended"
This echoes the language of Lord Wilberforce in Farrell v Alexander [1977] AC 59 at 72 (cited with approval by Lord Hutton in Ex p Spath Holme Ltd [2001] 2 WLR 15 at 50) at p.50) who permitted recourse to the antecedent law when "there is a real and substantial difficulty ... which classical methods of construction cannot resolve"."
"47.(1) Except as otherwise provided by this Part of this Act, corporation tax shall not be chargeable on dividends and other distributions of a company resident in the United Kingdom, nor shall any such dividends or distributions be taken into account in computing income for corporation tax; but income tax for a year of assessment after the year 1965-66 shall be chargeable under a new Schedule F in respect of all dividends and other distributions in that year of a company resident in the United Kingdom which are not chargeable under Schedule D or Schedule E and are not specially exempted from income tax, and for the purposes of income tax all such distributions shall be regarded as income, however they fall to be dealt with in the hands of the recipient."
"46. (1) Where the Treasury have before the commencement of this Act issued or may thereafter issue any securities which they have power to issue for the purpose of raising any money or any loan, with a condition that the interest thereon shall not be liable to tax or super-tax, so long as it is shown, in manner directed by the Treasury, that the securities are in the beneficial ownership of persons who are not ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom, the interest of securities issued with such a condition shall be exempt accordingly."
"The Treasury may, if they think fit, during the continuance of the present war and a period of twelve months thereafter, issue any securities which they have the power to issue for the purpose of raising any money or any loan with a condition that neither the capital nor the interest thereof shall be liable to any taxation, present or future, so long as it is shown in manner directed by the Treasury that the securities are in the beneficial ownership of persons who are neither domiciled nor ordinarily resident in the united Kingdom, and securities issued with such a condition shall be exempt accordingly."
"Section 46 is in my opinion a perfectly general exemption: the language is unqualified… If, notwithstanding what I regard as the clear language of this Section, it was construed as merely relating to interest as interest, which is the expression used in argument by Mr Hills as defining its meaning, with the consequence that the owner of the securities - in this case the bank - can only escape taxation if the tax is sought to be imposed upon him under Case III of Sch.D and that he is liable to be taxed under the provision of Case I of Sch.D, then it seems to me that a result is being reached which is quite contrary to the apparent meaning of the particular legislation and which, to my mind, involves the very serious frustration of what I imagine the parties taking the securities from time to time might be assumed to have contemplated. The section was put in in 1915, when it was undoubtedly desired to attract subscriptions to loans which were being put forward, as we well remember in those critical years of the war. It seems to me that it would be rather deplorable if, notwithstanding what I regard as the clear language of s.46, the owner, not being ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom, was still taxed on the interest as part of his trading profits, and in my view that is not the true construction of the section. It is not introduced in respect of any particular Schedule; it is quite general, and that it is quite general is made even more apparent when reference is made to s.47 of the Finance (No.2) Act, 1915. I see no ground at all consistent with ordinary principles of construction for cutting down its meaning and treating it as only applicable to Case III of Sch. D, the Case under which, by Section 49, War Loan Securities were taxable if they were taxable at all. If they are not taxable at all, then obviously they can neither be charged under Case III of Sch.D nor under any Case of Sch.D at all."
"As regards the War Loan, the Crown did not maintain their appeal. In this I think that the Crown were well advised, for I agree with the learned Master of the Rolls that their contention is contrary to the apparent meaning of the statutory provisions, originally contained in s. 47 of the Finance (No.2) Act, 1915, and would involve the very serious frustration of what the parties, taking the securities from time to time, might be assumed to have contemplated."
"No tax shall be chargeable in respect of … (d) The interest or dividends on any securities of a foreign State or a British possession which are payable in the United Kingdom, where it is proved to the satisfaction of the Commissioners of Inland Revenue that the person owning the securities and entitled to the interest or dividends is not resident in the United Kingdom, but, save as provided by this Act, no allowance shall be given or repayment be made in respect of the tax on the interest or dividends on the securities of any foreign State or any British possession which are payable in the United Kingdom…"
"But it is necessary to notice here an argument which the Crown put forward as applicable to all the four credit items in dispute - namely, that the provisions of s. 46, sub-s.1, of the Income Tax Act, and Rule 2 (d) of the General Rules applicable to Sch. C merely exempted certain interest paid to persons not resident or not ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom from charge under Sch. C, or Case III. of Sch. D, qua interest, and did not operate to exclude any trading receipts of a trade exercised in the United Kingdom from the computation of the profits of the trade for the purposes of assessment under Case I. of Sch. D. This appears to have been the only argument submitted by the Crown as to the War Loan, but, despite their abandonment of it as regards the War Loan, they still maintained it as regards the remaining items before your Lordships.
My Lords, I have no difficulty in rejecting this contention; I agree with the Courts below that whether as interest or as a component part of the profits of a trade, the exemptions must equally apply."
"In general, I am of opinion that it is not open to the revenue to subject a taxpayer to two different charges to tax in respect of the same receipts. Thus in Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Garvin [1981] 1 WLR 793 I consider the correct view on the hypothetical question there discussed to be that it was necessary for the revenue to elect between raising a charge under section 460 on the basis that the sums in question were received as income and raising a charge under the capital gains tax legislation on the basis that these sums were received as capital. It seems to me that this result follows from a straightforward application of principle. The two claims are incompatible ..."
"(3) Subject to subsection (6) below, the exclusion by section 208 from the charge to corporation tax of franked investment income shall not prevent such income being taken into account as part of the profits in computing under section 436 income from pension business."
Analysis of TA 1988 s.208
"Each side contended that the case put forward by the other side would give rise in a number of instances to anomalies and injustice. Time was spent in examining whether or not the alleged anomaly would in fact arise. I did not find this helpful for, as Buckley L.J. said [1980] Ch.l, 24D, in the course of his judgment in this case: "The ingenuity of counsel can almost always produce possible anomalies in either direction, and that has been the case here"."
"2.(1) There shall be excluded from the consideration for a disposal of assets taken into account in the computation under this Schedule of the gain accruing on that disposal any money or money's worth charged to income tax as income of, or taken into account as a receipt in computing income or profits or gains or losses of, the person making the disposal for the purposes of the Income Tax Acts."
Other arguments
Decision