BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Inland Revenue v. Old Monkland Conservative Association [1904] ScotLR 42_121 (22 November 1904) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1904/42SLR0121.html Cite as: [1904] ScotLR 42_121, [1904] SLR 42_121 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
Page: 121↓
[Exchequer Cause.
Although in the Income-Tax Acts unincorporated societies are in the statutory provisions laying on income-tax expressly mentioned as being chargeable with the tax, while in the statutory provisions relative to claims for exemption from income-tax, such societies are not expressly referred to, nevertheless an unincorporated society whose aggregate annual income is less than £160 is exempt from income-tax.
The Income-Tax Act 1842 (5 and 6 Vict. c. 35) enacts as follows:—Section 40—“All bodies politic, corporate, or collegiate, companies, fraternities, fellowships, or societies of persons whether corporate or not corporate, shall be chargeable with such and the like duties as any person will under and by virtue of this Act be chargeable with.” … Section 163—“That any person charged or chargeable to the duties granted by this Act either by assessment or by way of deduction from any rent, annuity, interest, or other annual payment to which he may be entitled, who shall prove before the Commissioners for general purposes in the manner hereinafter mentioned that the aggregate annual amount of his income, estimated according to the several rules and directions of this Act, is less than £150, shall be exempted from the said duties.” … [The Finance Act 1894 (57 and 58 Vict. c. 30), sec. 34, extends the exemption to “persons whose respective incomes do not exceed £160a-year.”] Section 192—“Wherever in this Act, with reference to any person, matter, or thing, any word or words is or are used importing the singular number or the masculine gender only, yet such word or words shall be understood to include several persons as well as one person, females as well as males, bodies politic or corporate as well as individuals, and several matters or things as well as one matter or thing unless it be otherwise specially provided, or there be something in the subject or context repugnant to such construction.”…
This was an appeal under section 59 of the Taxes Management Act 1880 (43 and 44 Vict. c. 19) by Frederick Janies Curtis, Surveyor of Taxes, Glasgow, from a determination of the Commissioners of Income-Tax for the Middle Ward of Lanarkshire at a meeting held at Hamilton on 25th February 1904. At this meeting the Old Monk-land Conservative Association had appealed against an assessment of £65 for the year 1903–4 made upon it in respect of premises situated at Nos. 20–22 Church Street.
In the case for the opinion of the Court of Exchequer the Commissioners stated—“The following facts were found or admitted—1. The Association is constituted under certain rules and bye-laws.… 2. The Association is the owner and occupier of the premises at No. 20–2 Church Street aforesaid. The premises are occupied by the Association as reading and recreation rooms, offices, &c. 3. The feu-duty (£2, 15s. 5d.) paid by the Association for its premises, and the interest (£31) paid by it on a bond over its premises, amount to £33, 15s. 5d., from which the Association deducted income-tax amounting to £1, 10s. 11d. 4. For the year of assessment the Association had no excess of income over expenditure. The Association claimed total exemption from income-tax (except in respect of the feu-duty and interest referred to in No. 3) for the year 1903–04, on the ground that its income from all sources did not exceed £160, and in support of this claim founded on the following enactments”—(These are quoted supra.)
“On behalf of the Association it was contended that the constitution of the Association is defined by and embraced in section 40 of 5 and 6 Vict. c. 35, under which section it is therefore entitled to rank: and alternatively under section 192 of said Act it was further argued that section 40 applied not only for the purpose of ‘charging’ any body of persons, but also for the purpose of relieving them under section 163 of the same Act, and that otherwise the word ‘wherever’ at the opening of section 192 would have to be wholly disregarded.
“On behalf of the Crown it was contended that section 40 was a charging section; that section 163 granted exemption to ‘any person’ with a certain limited aggregate annual amount of income; that the words ‘any person’ could not be held to include an association, as the wording of section 163 was repugnant to such construction, and that the Association was not a body politic or corporate. A club as a body though a distinct entity has no position recognised in law; it is not a company or a corporation but an unincorporated society— per Day, J., Steele v. Gourley, 1886, 3 T.L.R. 119.”
The Commissioners sustained the appeal.
The Surveyor of Taxes being of opinion that the determination of the Commissioners was erroneous in point of law, appealed to the Court of Exchequer. The case was appointed to be heard before the First Division.
Argued for the appellant—Under section 40 of the Act of 1842 an unincorporated society such as the respondents was declared in the most comprehensive terms to be chargeable with income-tax. But under section 163, providing for exemption, the the words were that “any person” whose income is less than £150 “shall be exempted from” the duties. The word “person” could not include an association such as the respondents,
Page: 122↓
who did not constitute a legal person. The expression “several persons” in the interpreting section (section 192 of the Act of 1842) referred simply to the plural number and not to an unincorporated society. Argued for the respondents—It was an unreasonable construction of the Income-Tax Acts to hold that while the charging section applied to unincorporated societies, the exempting section did not apply to such societies. Further, such a construction was not rendered necessary by the terms of the statutory provisions. In the interpreting section (section 192 of the Act of 1842) the word “person” was defined as meaning “several persons” as well as one person, and so the word “any person” in the exempting section of the Act covered a group of persons such as the respondents.
At advising—
The Association, which is constituted under certain rules and bye-laws, is the owner and occupier of the premises in Church Street, and these premises are used by it as reading and recreation rooms, and for other analogous purposes.
A feu-duty of £2, 15s. 5d. is paid by the Association in respect of the premises, and it also pays £31 of interest annually on a bond over them. From the aggregate of these two sums, amounting together to £33, 15s. 5d., the Association deducted income tax amounting £1, 10s. 11d., and no question arises as to this.
The Association had not in the year of assessment any excess of income over expenditure, and it claims total exemption from income tax (except in respect of the feu-duty and interest already mentioned), for the year 1903–1904, on the ground that its income from all sources did not exceed £160.
The following are the leading statutory provisions upon which the question depends.
[ His Lordship quoted the Acts as set forth supra].
It was maintained on behalf of the Crown that section 40 of the Act of 5 and 6 Vict. cap. 35, was the charging section, and that although section 163 provided for exemption of “any person” having a specified limited aggregate annual income, the words “any person” could not be held to include the Association, as the wording of section 163 was repugnant to such a construction, and that the Association was not “a body politic or corporate.”
It is, however, to be observed with reference to this contention, that by section 40 of the Act, not only corporations and other proper legal persons are rendered liable, but also “fraternities, fellowships, or societies of persons, whether corporate or not corporate,” and it is under these words that the Association becomes chargeable, although it is not a corporate entity in law. Prima facie one would expect if it is charged under any of the denominations above mentioned, it would, when its income does not exceed £160 a year, be exempted like an individual or a proper legal person, under the same or a similar denomination, and I think this is the true construction of the statutes, the exemption, like the charge, including a group of individuals, such as the members of the Old Monkland Conservative Association, although they do not constitute either a corporation or any other legal entity.
For these reasons I am of opinion that the Commissioners acted rightly in sustaining the appeal, and that their decision should be affirmed.
Page: 123↓
The Court dismissed the appeal and sustained the deliverance of the Commissioners.
Counsel for the Appellant the Surveyor of Taxes—The Solicitor-General ( Dundas, K.C.)— Young. Agent— Philip J. Hamilton Grierson, Solicitor of Inland Revenue.
Counsel for the Respondents— R. S. Horne. Agents— Gray & Handyside, S.S.C.