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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Revenue and Customs v Secret Hotels2 Ltd (Rev 1) [2014] UKSC 16 (05 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2014/16.html Cite as: [2014] STC 937, [2014] STI 864, [2014] BVC 9, [2014] UKSC 16, [2014] 2 All ER 685 |
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Hilary Term
[2014] UKSC 16
On appeal from: [2012] EWCA Civ 1571
JUDGMENT
The Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs (Respondent) v Secret Hotels2 Limited (formerly Med Hotels Limited) (Appellant)
before
Lord Neuberger, President
Lord Sumption
Lord Reed
Lord Hughes
Lord Hodge
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
5 March 2014
Heard on 29 and 30 January 2014
Appellant David Milne QC Nicola Shaw QC (Instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP) |
Respondent Sam Grodzinski QC Eleni Mitrophanous Hanif Mussa (Instructed by General Counsel for HM Revenue & Customs) |
LORD NEUBERGER (with whom Lord Sumption, Lord Reed, Lord Hughes and Lord Hodge agree)
The basic facts
The relevant VAT law
"Article 306
1. [(a)] Member States shall apply a special VAT scheme, in accordance with this Chapter, to transactions carried out by travel agents who deal with customers in their own name and use supplies of goods or services provided by other taxable persons, in the provision of travel facilities.
[(b)] This special scheme shall not apply to travel agents where they act solely as intermediaries and to whom point (c) of the first paragraph of Article 79 applies for the purposes of calculating the taxable amount.
2. For the purposes of this Chapter, tour operators shall be regarded as travel agents."
Article 79(c) excludes from liability to VAT the "amounts received by a taxable person from the customer, as repayment of expenditure entered in his books in a suspense account."
"Article 307
1. Transactions made, in accordance with the conditions laid down in Article 306, by the travel agent in respect of a journey shall be regarded as a single service supplied by the travel agent to the traveller.
2. The single service shall be taxable in the Member State in which the travel agent has established his business or has a fixed establishment from which the travel agent has carried out the supply of services.
Article 308
The taxable amount and the price exclusive of VAT, within the meaning of point (8) of Article 226, in respect of the single service provided by the travel agent shall be the travel agent's margin, that is to say, the difference between the total amount, exclusive of VAT, to be paid by the traveller and the actual cost to the travel agent of supplies of goods or services provided by other taxable persons, where those transactions are for the direct benefit of the traveller."
The contentions of the parties in summary
The procedural history
"Does [Med] act as a principal, as the Commissioners allege, or as an agent, as [Med] contends, when making the supplies of hotel accommodation? It is common ground that if the Commissioners are correct then [Med] is in principle required to account for output tax under the TOMS and if [Med] is correct then the supplies are treated as taking place in the jurisdiction in which the hotel belongs (and are, therefore, outside the scope of UK VAT)".
"whether the [FTT] was entitled to find (as a matter of law and fact) that [Med] was supplying accommodation services as principal, in which case it was required to account for VAT in the United Kingdom, or whether it should have found that [Med] was acting as agent for a disclosed principal, in which case the supplies of accommodation services fell to be treated as made in the jurisdiction in which the hotel was situated and so do not give rise to any liability to VAT in the United Kingdom."
Overview of the issues
The correct approach to article 306
"makes the application of that article subject to the condition that the travel agent shall deal with customers in his own name and not as an intermediary. It is for the national court before which a dispute concerning the application of these provisions is brought to inquire, having regard to all the details of the case, and in particular the nature of the travel agent's contractual obligations towards the traveller, whether or not that condition is met."
"42. As regards in particular the importance of contractual terms in categorising a transaction as a taxable transaction, it is necessary to bear in mind the case law of the court according to which consideration of economic and commercial realities is a fundamental criterion for the application of the common system of VAT .
43. Given that the contractual position normally reflects the economic and commercial reality of the transactions and in order to satisfy the requirements of legal certainty, the relevant contractual terms constitute a factor to be taken into consideration when the supplier and the recipient in a 'supply of services' transaction within the meaning of articles 2(1) and 6(1) of the Sixth Directive have to be identified.
44. It may, however, become apparent that, sometimes, certain contractual terms do not wholly reflect the economic and commercial reality of the transactions.
45. That is the case in particular if it becomes apparent that those contractual terms constitute a purely artificial arrangement which does not correspond with the economic and commercial reality of the transactions."
The correct approach in domestic law
"The court is often called upon to decide whether a written contract falls within a particular legal description. In so doing the court will identify the rights and obligations of the parties as a matter of construction of the written agreement; but it will then go on to consider whether those obligations fall within the relevant legal description. Thus the question may be whether those rights and obligations are properly characterised as a licence or tenancy (as in Street v Mountford [1985] AC 809); or as a fixed or floating charge (as in Agnew v IRC [2001] 2 AC 710), or as a consumer hire agreement (as in TRM Copy Centres (UK) Ltd v Lanwall Services Ltd [2009] 1 WLR 1375). In all these cases the starting point is to identify the legal rights and obligations of the parties as a matter of contract before going on to classify them."
The effect of the documentation
The factors relied on by the FTT and the Court of Appeal
"(1) Med dealt with customers in its own name (a) in respect of the use of its website and (b) in the services of its local handling agents.
(2) Med dealt with customers in its own name (and not as intermediary) in those cases where the hotel operator was unable to provide accommodation as booked and the customer rejected the alternative accommodation offered.
(3) Med dealt with matters of complaint and compensation in its own name and without reference to the hotelier.
(4) Med used the services of other taxable persons (the hoteliers) in the provision of the travel facilities marketed through its website.
(5) In relation to VAT, Med dealt with hoteliers in other Member States in a manner inconsistent with the relationship of principal and agent. In particular, Med did not provide the hoteliers with invoices in respect of its commission (nor even notify the hoteliers of the amount of that commission); so making it impossible for the hoteliers to comply with their obligations to account to the tax authorities of that Member State in accordance with the Principal VAT Directive.
(6)(a) Med treated deposits and other monies which it received from customers and their agents as its own monies. It did not account to the hoteliers for those monies. (b) It did not enter those monies in a suspense account so as to take advantage of article 79(c); and so cannot rely on the exclusion from the scope of article 306.1(b)."
The Commissioners also rely on the points that (7) hoteliers would invoice Med for the net sum in respect of each customer at the end of the relevant holiday, and (8) Med reserved a number of rooms, and sometimes specific rooms, in many hotels for which it paid the net sum in advance.
The decisions below
The application of article 306 to the facts of this case
Conclusion