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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Littlewoods Ltd and others v Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs [2017] UKSC 70 (01 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2017/70.html Cite as: [2017] UKSC 70, [2018] AC 869, [2017] STC 2413, [2017] WLR(D) 744, [2018] 1 All ER 83, [2017] 3 WLR 1401 |
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[2017] UKSC 70
On appeal from: [2015] EWCA Civ 515
JUDGMENT
Littlewoods Limited and others (Respondents) v Commissioners for Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (Appellant)
Littlewoods Limited and others (Appellants) v Commissioners for Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (Respondent)
before
Lord Neuberger
Lord Clarke
Lord Reed
Lord Carnwath
Lord Hodge
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
1 November 2017
Heard on 3 and 4 July 2017
Appellant/Respondent (HMRC) Jonathan Swift QC Andrew Macnab Peter Mantle Imran Afzal (Instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor to Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs) |
|
Respondents/Appellants (Littlewoods) Laurence Rabinowitz QC Steven Elliott Maximilian Schlote Michael Jones (Instructed by Weil, Gotshal & Manges (London) LLP) |
LORD REED AND LORD HODGE: (with whom Lord Neuberger, Lord Clarke and Lord Carnwath agree)
The basis of the claims
7. The claims for compound interest are made on two bases. First, it is argued that HMRC are under a liability to make restitution on the basis that they were unjustly enriched by payments made under a mistake of law, applying the principle established in Kleinwort Benson Ltd v Lincoln County Council [1999] 2 AC 349 and Deutsche Morgan Grenfell Group plc v Inland Revenue Comrs [2006] UKHL 49; [2007] 1 AC 558. Although the payments have been reimbursed in accordance with section 80, it is argued that compound interest remains due at common law as restitution of the use value of the money mistakenly paid, applying the principle established in Sempra Metals Ltd v Inland Revenue Comrs [2007] UKHL 34; [2008] AC 561.
8. Secondly, it is argued that HMRC are in any event liable to make restitution on the basis that they were unjustly enriched by payments of undue tax, applying the principle established in Woolwich Equitable Building Society v Inland Revenue Comrs [1993] AC 70, as explained in Test Claimants in the FII Group Litigation v Revenue and Customs Comrs [2012] UKSC 19; [2012] 2 AC 337. On that basis also, it is argued that compound interest remains due under the principle established in Sempra Metals. Woolwich-type claims are only advanced, however, in respect of compound interest on overpayments made within the six years preceding issuance of the claim forms, in view of the limitation period applicable to such claims, and are therefore much more limited than the mistake-based claims.
The history of the proceedings
10. A trial on liability was held before Vos J. In his judgment, he held that, as a matter of statutory construction, the claims were excluded by sections 78 and 80 of the 1994 Act: [2010] EWHC 1071 (Ch); [2010] STC 2072. He also held that the question whether the exclusion of the claims by those provisions was contrary to EU law should be referred to the Court of Justice of the EU. In a subsequent judgment, he determined the questions to be referred, and made the order for reference: [2010] EWHC 2771 (Ch); [2011] STC 171. At the same time, he made a declaration that the claims were, as a matter of English law and without reference to EU law, excluded by sections 78 and 80 of the 1994 Act.
11. The questions referred were the following:
Question 1:
Where a taxable person has overpaid VAT which was collected by the member state contrary to the requirements of EU VAT legislation, does the remedy provided by a member state accord with EU law if that remedy provides only for (a) reimbursement of the principal sums overpaid, and (b) simple interest on those sums in accordance with national legislation, such as section 78 of the Value Added Tax Act 1994?
Question 2:
If not, does EU law require that the remedy provided by a member state should provide for (a) reimbursement of the principal sums overpaid, and (b) payment of compound interest as the measure of the use value of the sums overpaid in the hands of the member state and/or the loss of the use value of the money in the hands of the taxpayer?
Question 3:
If the answer to both questions one and two is in the negative, what must the remedy that EU law requires the member state to provide include, in addition to reimbursement of the principal sums overpaid, in respect of the use value of the overpayment and/or interest?
Question 4:
If the answer to question 1 is in the negative, does the EU law principle of effectiveness require a member state to disapply national law restrictions (such as sections 78 and 80 of the Value Added Tax Act 1994) on any domestic claims or remedies that would otherwise be available to the taxable person to vindicate the EU law right established in the Court of Justice’s answer to the first three questions, or can the principle of effectiveness be satisfied if the national court disapplies such restrictions only in respect of one of these domestic claims or remedies?
What other principles should guide the national court in giving effect to this EU law right so as to accord with the EU law principle of effectiveness?
12. The Court of Justice (Grand Chamber) (“CJEU” or “the court”) examined the questions together, and reformulated them as asking “in essence, whether, in a situation such as that at issue in the cases in the main proceedings, in which an amount of VAT overpaid by reason of non-compliance with EU law has been repaid to the taxpayer concerned, it is in accordance with EU law for national law to provide for the payment of only ‘simple’ interest on that sum, or whether EU law requires national law to provide for payment of ‘compound interest’ as a counterpart for the value of the use of the overpaid sums and/or the loss of the value of the use of the latter or for another method of reparation which, in that latter case, the court is asked to specify”: (Case C-591/10) [2012] STC 1714, para 22. The court answered the question as follows at para 35:
“European Union law must be interpreted as requiring that a taxable person who has overpaid value added tax which was collected by the member state contrary to the requirements of European Union legislation on value added tax has a right to reimbursement of the tax collected in breach of European Union law and to the payment of interest on the amount of the latter. It is for national law to determine, in compliance with the principles of effectiveness and equivalence, whether the principal sum must bear ‘simple interest’, ‘compound interest’ or another type of interest.”
13. The High Court proceedings then resumed before Henderson J, who heard a trial of all outstanding issues. In his judgment, he held that Littlewoods’ claims succeeded in full: [2014] EWHC 868 (Ch); [2014] STC 1761. In particular, he held that only an award of compound interest would satisfy Littlewoods’ rights under EU law, that the exclusion of the claims by sections 78 and 80 of the 1994 Act was therefore incompatible with EU law, and that those provisions had to be disapplied so as to allow Littlewoods to pursue their claims.
14. Both parties appealed. The Court of Appeal (Arden, Patten and Floyd LJJ) upheld Henderson J’s conclusions on all issues, and dismissed both sides’ appeals: [2015] EWCA Civ 515; [2016] Ch 373.
The first issue
“80.- Credit for, or repayment of, overstated or overpaid VAT.
(1) Where a person -
(a) has accounted to the Commissioners for VAT for a prescribed accounting period (whenever ended), and
(b) in doing so, has brought into account as output tax an amount that was not output tax due,
the Commissioners shall be liable to credit the person with that amount.
(1A) Where the Commissioners -
(a) have assessed a person to VAT for a prescribed accounting period (whenever ended), and
(b) in doing so, have brought into account as output tax an amount that was not output tax due,
they shall be liable to credit the person with that amount.
(1B) Where a person has for a prescribed accounting period (whenever ended) paid to the Commissioners an amount by way of VAT that was not VAT due to them, otherwise than as a result of -
(a) an amount that was not output tax due being brought into account as output tax, or
(b) an amount of input tax allowable under section 26 not being brought into account,
the Commissioners shall be liable to repay to that person the amount so paid.
(2) The Commissioners shall only be liable to credit or repay an amount under this section on a claim being made for the purpose.
(2A) Where -
(a) as a result of a claim under this section by virtue of subsection (1) or (1A) above an amount falls to be credited to a person, and
(b) after setting any sums against it under or by virtue of this Act, some or all of that amount remains to his credit,
the Commissioners shall be liable to pay (or repay) to him so much of that amount as so remains.
(3) It shall be a defence, in relation to a claim under this section by virtue of subsection (1) or (1A) above, that the crediting of an amount would unjustly enrich the claimant ...
(4) The Commissioners shall not be liable on a claim under this section -
(a) to credit an amount to a person under subsection (1) or (1A) above, or
(b) to repay an amount to a person under subsection (1B) above,
if the claim is made more than three years after the relevant date [ie the end of the prescribed accounting period] ...
(6) A claim under this section shall be made in such form and manner and shall be supported by such documentary evidence as the Commissioners prescribe by regulations; and regulations under this subsection may make different provision for different cases.
(7) Except as provided by this section, the Commissioners shall not be liable to credit or repay any amount accounted for or paid to them by way of VAT that was not VAT due to them.”
19. The retrospective introduction of the reduced limitation period, without any transitional arrangements for cases where a right to recovery of overpaid tax already existed, was held by the CJEU to be incompatible with EU law: Marks & Spencer plc v Customs and Excise Comrs (Case C-62/00) [2003] QB 866. The House of Lords subsequently decided that the reduced limitation period had to be disapplied in respect of rights which had accrued before it was brought into force: Fleming (trading as Bodycraft) v Revenue and Customs Comrs [2008] UKHL 2; [2008] 1 WLR 195. It is on that basis that HMRC have repaid Littlewoods the overpaid tax back to 1973. The position was addressed legislatively in section 121 of the Finance Act 2008, which excluded the application of section 80(4) of the 1994 Act to claims in respect of amounts brought into account or paid before 4 December 1996, provided the claim was made before 1 April 2009.
21. Section 80(4) lays down a limitation period for claims under the section which, following the amendment effected by the Finance Act 1997, is shorter than the period of six years, capable of extension where a mistake has been made, which would apply to a common law claim in unjust enrichment under the Limitation Act 1980. A statutory claim by the taxpayer must therefore be brought within a shorter and more certain period of time. The evident aim is to protect public finances against the risk of a liability to repay tax emerging more than three years after the tax was received. That is consistent with the background to the amendment: as Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe explained in the Fleming case at para 36, it was prompted by developments in the case law of the CJEU which exposed HMRC to the risk of claims for repayment of large amounts of output tax, some of it going back for many years. As this court put it in Investment Trust Companies v Revenue and Customs Comrs [2017] UKSC 29; [2017] 2 WLR 1200, para 88, the limitation period is designed to avoid the disruption of public finances.
“Parliament cannot sensibly be taken to have intended, when it created this scheme for the reimbursement of suppliers (with provision for them in turn to reimburse their customers), subject to strict time limits, that it should exist concurrently with non-statutory liabilities towards suppliers and their customers which were potentially wider in scope and were subject to a longer and less certain limitation period. Such an intention would be inconsistent with the rationale of the statutory scheme.” (para 84)
“78.- Interest in certain cases of official error.
(1) Where, due to an error on the part of the Commissioners, a person has -
(a) accounted to them for an amount by way of output tax which was not output tax due from him and, as a result, they are liable under section 80(2A) to pay (or repay) an amount to him, or
(b) failed to claim credit under section 25 for an amount for which he was entitled so to claim credit and which they are in consequence liable to pay to him, or
(c) (otherwise than in a case falling within paragraph (a) or (b) above) paid to them by way of VAT an amount that was not VAT due and which they are in consequence liable to repay to him, or
(d) suffered delay in receiving payment of an amount due to him from them in connection with VAT,
then, if and to the extent that they would not be liable to do so apart from this section, they shall pay interest to him on that amount for the applicable period, but subject to the following provisions of this section ...
(3) Interest under this section shall be payable at the rate applicable under section 197 of the Finance Act 1996 ...
(10) The Commissioners shall only be liable to pay interest under this section on a claim made in writing for that purpose.
(11) A claim under this section shall not be made more than three years after the end of the applicable period to which it relates [ie the period ending when the Commissioners authorise payment of the amount on which the interest is payable].” (emphasis added)
28. This argument has been consistently rejected by the courts, but for a variety of different reasons. In F J Chalke Ltd v Revenue and Customs Comrs [2009] EWHC 952 (Ch); [2009] STC 2027, Henderson J focused on the fact that section 80(7) excludes any common law liability to repay the overpaid VAT, and inferred that it must also exclude any common law liability to pay interest: “the exclusion in section 80(7) of any liability to repay overpaid VAT save as provided for by section 80 necessarily prevents the recovery of any interest on the overpaid VAT, except where section 78 or some other statutory provision provides an entitlement to such interest” (para 74). The difficulty with that reasoning, as the Court of Appeal pointed out in the present case (paras 37-42), is that it was held in Sempra Metals that a restitutionary claim in respect of the use value of money is distinct from a restitutionary claim in respect of the money itself: the right to recover interest was described as a free-standing cause of action. On that basis, it would appear, at least on a strict reading, that even if the cause of action for repayment of the overpaid tax is swept away by section 80(7), that may not exclude a cause of action in respect of the use value of the money.
35. In R (Quintavalle) v Secretary of State for Health [2003] 2 AC 687, para 8, Lord Bingham of Cornhill stated, in relation to statutory interpretation:
“The basic task of the court is to ascertain and give effect to the true meaning of what Parliament has said in the enactment to be construed. But that is not to say that attention should be confined and a literal interpretation given to the particular provisions which give rise to difficulty.”
In that regard, his Lordship cited the speech of Lord Wilberforce in Royal College of Nursing of the United Kingdom v Department of Health and Social Security [1981] AC 800, 822:
“In interpreting an Act of Parliament it is proper, and indeed necessary, to have regard to the state of affairs existing, and known by Parliament to be existing, at the time. It is a fair presumption that Parliament’s policy or intention is directed to that state of affairs.”
36. At the time of when section 78 was enacted, interest was available under the VAT legislation only in limited circumstances, discussed below. Interest was also available under statute on a sum for which judgment was given in proceedings for the recovery of a debt or damages: Senior Courts Act 1981, section 35A (as inserted by section 15 of the Administration of Justice Act 1982). Under the common law, on the other hand, the general rule was that the court had no power, in the absence of agreement, to award interest as damages for the late payment of a debt: London, Chatham and Dover Railway Co v South Eastern Railway Co [1893] AC 429. An exception to that general rule existed where loss due to late payment constituted special damage within the contemplation of the parties, under the second limb of Hadley v Baxendale (1854) 9 Exch 341: President of India v La Pintada Cia Navigacion SA [1985] AC 104. So far as restitutionary claims were concerned, it had been held that in an action for money had and received only the net sum could be recovered: Johnson v The King [1904] AC 817, applying London, Chatham and Dover Railway Co v South Eastern Railway Co. Against that background, the statutory scheme established by section 78 was more generous than the common law, as then understood.
Summary on issue 1
The second issue
43. In para 24 of its judgment the CJEU recorded its settled case law that the right to a refund of charges levied in a member state in breach of rules of EU law is a consequence and complement of the rights conferred on individuals by provisions of EU law as interpreted by the Court. In that regard, the CJEU referred to Amministrazione delle Finanze dello Stato v SpA San Giorgio (Case 199/82) [1983] ECR 3595, para 12 and Metallgesellschaft Ltd v Inland Revenue Comrs (Joined Cases C-397/98 and C-410/98) [2001] Ch 620; [2001] ECR I-1727, para 84. It continued:
“The member state is therefore in principle required to repay charges levied in breach of Community law [Société Comateb v Directeur Général des Douanes et Droits Indirects (Joined Cases C-192/95 to C-218/95) [1997] ECR I-165, para 20; Metallgesellschaft, para 84; Weber’s Wine World Handels-GmbH v Abgabenberufungskommission Wien (Case C-147/01) [2003] ECR I-11365, para 93; Test Claimants in the FII Group Litigation (Case C-446/04) [2006] ECR I-11753, para 202)].
25. The Court has also held that, where a member state has levied charges in breach of the rules of Community law, individuals are entitled to reimbursement not only of the tax unduly levied but also of the amounts paid to that state or retained by it which relate directly to that tax. That also includes losses constituted by the unavailability of sums of money as a result of a tax being levied prematurely (Metallgesellschaft, paras 87 to 89, and Test Claimants in the FII Group Litigation, para 205).
26. It follows from that case law that the principle of the obligation of member states to repay with interest amounts of tax levied in breach of EU law follows from that law.
27. In the absence of EU legislation, it is for the internal legal order of each member state to lay down the conditions in which such interest must be paid, particularly the rate of that interest and its method of calculation (simple or ‘compound’ interest). Those conditions must comply with the principles of equivalence and effectiveness; that is to say that they must not be less favourable than those concerning similar claims based on provisions of national law or arranged in such a way as to make the exercise of rights conferred by the EU legal order practically impossible (see, to that effect, [San Giorgio, para 12; Weber’s Wine World, para 103; and MyTravel plc v Commissioners of Customs and Excise (Case C-291/03) [2005] ECR I-8477, para 17]).
28. Thus, according to consistent case law, the principle of effectiveness prohibits a member state from rendering the exercise of rights conferred by the EU legal order impossible in practice or excessively difficult [(R (Wells) v Secretary of State for Transport, Local Government and the Regions (Case C-201/02) [2004] ECR I-723, para 67, and i-21 Germany GmbH v Federal Republic of Germany (Joined Cases C-392/04 and C-422/04) [2006] ECR I-8559, para 57)].
29. In this case that principle requires that the national rules referring in particular to the calculation of interest which may be due should not lead to depriving the taxpayer of an adequate indemnity for the loss occasioned through the undue payment of VAT.
30. It is for the referring court to determine whether that is so in the case at issue in the main proceedings, having regard to all the circumstances of the case. In that regard it should be noted that it is apparent from the order for reference that, under the provisions of section 78 of the VATA 1994, the Commissioners paid Littlewoods interest on the VAT levied in breach of EU law. Pursuant to those provisions, Littlewoods received payment of simple interest, in accordance with the said provisions, in an amount of GBP 268,159,135, corresponding to interest due over about 30 years, which amount exceeds by more than 23% that of the principal sum, which amounts to GBP 204,774,763.”
The CJEU then addressed what was required in order to comply with the principle of equivalence; but no question concerning that principle arises in this case.
45. In order to understand the debate in this appeal and the reasons for our conclusions, it is useful to summarise the relevant parts of Henderson J’s impressive judgment. Henderson J upheld Littlewoods’ submission essentially because he interpreted the reference to “an adequate indemnity” in para 29 of the CJEU’s judgment as a right to reimbursement of the losses representing the time value of unlawfully levied tax which the member state retained. Those losses resulted from the unavailability to the taxpaying company of the sums of money which it had erroneously paid as tax. The CJEU had held in para 25 that those losses fell within the sums retained by the state “which relate directly to that tax”. The right to interest to make good those losses had been recognised as a right conferred by EU law (para 260). He found support for that interpretation of the CJEU judgment in two later judgments of the CJEU. In the first, British Sugar plc v Rural Payments Agency (Case C‑147/10) heard with Zuckerfabrik Jülich AG v Hauptzollamt Aache (Case C-133/10) and Société Tereos v Directeur général des douanes et droits indirects (Case C-234/10) EU:C:2012:591, the Fourth Chamber of the CJEU held that interest was payable by the national body, the Rural Payments Agency, on invalidly levied sugar levies even if it could not recover interest on those levies from the EU institution, to which it had paid them, and it had not been enriched by the receipt of the levies. This, Henderson J held, emphasised the potency of the right to interest in EU law, which the CJEU appeared to regard as conceptually indistinguishable from the right to repayment of the unlawfully levied tax (para 263).
46. The second case, Irimie v Administratia Finantelor Publice Sibiu (Case C-565/11) [2013] STC 1321, concerned a rule of Romanian law which provided that interest on unlawfully levied tax, which had to be repaid, ran only from the date of the claim for repayment and not from the date when the tax had been paid. The CJEU held (paras 26-28) that the temporal limitation on the accrual of interest did not meet the requirements of the court’s ruling in Littlewoods that the calculation of interest should not lead to depriving the taxpayer of adequate compensation for the loss sustained through the undue payment of tax.
47. Henderson J expressed the view that the case advanced by Littlewoods in their detailed written observations to the CJEU assisted in interpreting the judgment of the court. Littlewoods had argued not that EU law always required the payment of compound interest on overpaid tax but that interest reflecting the use value of the money received should always be paid in order to satisfy the principle of effectiveness (para 273). Littlewoods had founded on the decision of the CJEU in Marshall v Southampton and South West Hampshire Health Authority (Teaching) (No 2) (Case C-271/91) [1994] QB 126; [1993] ECR I-4367. That case concerned the measure of compensation in a successful claim for sex discrimination arising from the health authority’s provision of an earlier compulsory retirement age for women compared with that for men in the same employment. The health authority paid her the maximum sum of £6,250 which was then permitted as compensation under the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 and the House of Lords referred to the CJEU the question whether it was essential to the due implementation of article 6 of Council Directive 76/207/EEC (“the Equal Treatment Directive”) that her compensation should not be less than the loss she had sustained and that it should include an award of interest. The CJEU held (paras 22-26) that the object of article 6 of the Equal Treatment Directive was to arrive at real equality of opportunity; when financial compensation was the measure adopted to achieve that objective, “it must be adequate, in that it must enable the loss and damage actually sustained as a result of the discriminatory dismissal to be made good in full in accordance with applicable national rules”. In relation to the award of interest, the CJEU held (para 31) that full compensation could not leave out of account factors, such as the effluxion of time, which reduce its value; an award of interest in accordance with applicable national rules was therefore an essential component of compensation for the purpose of restoring real equality of treatment. Henderson J considered that the references in that case to “adequate” compensation, with the connotation of “full compensation”, involved similar language to the phrase “an adequate indemnity” in para 29 of the CJEU’s judgment in this case (para 279).
49. He stated his conclusion on this matter in these terms (para 302):
“In sum, my overall conclusion on the difficult question of the meaning of the ‘adequate indemnity’ test in para 29 of the [CJEU’s] judgment is that it requires payment of an amount of interest which is broadly commensurate with the loss suffered by the taxpayer of the use value of the tax which he has overpaid, running from the date of payment until the date of repayment.”
On that basis, the simple interest which HMRC had paid could not have provided Littlewoods with an adequate indemnity for their loss (para 310).
52. First, the structure of the relevant passage in the CJEU’s judgment can be analysed in three parts. The first part is paras 24 to 26 in which the CJEU sets out the prior case law which established the right to a refund of charges levied by a member state in breach of EU law, and the extension of that right by Metallgesellschaft (above) and Test Claimants in the FII Group Litigation v Inland Revenue Comrs (Case C-446/04) (Note) [2012] 2 AC 436 to include other amounts retained by the member state, including compensation for the unavailability of sums of money paid as tax. We discuss those cases when we set out the third reason below. The conclusion which the CJEU reaches from the case law set out in paras 24 and 25 is stated in para 26 and merits repetition:
“It follows from that case law that the principle of the obligation of member states to repay with interest amounts of tax levied in breach of EU law follows from that law.”
There is therefore a general entitlement to interest on tax levied in breach of EU law.
57. What the CJEU said in para 30 suggests that the payment of a substantial amount of interest in a claim for repayment, which, unusually, stretches back over decades, can constitute reasonable redress. This is consistent with the application of the principle of effectiveness, namely that the rules do not render practically impossible or excessively difficult the exercise of rights conferred by EU law: having recognised a right to interest (para 26), the CJEU points out in para 30 that the taxpayer has already received interest amounting to more than 125% of the principal sum. This approach is also readily understandable in a context in which the CJEU, in the interests of legal certainty, has upheld the validity of national limitation periods of relatively short duration which restrict the ability of taxpayers to recover unduly paid tax: for example Rewe-Zentralfinanz eG v Landwirtschaftskammer für das Saarland (Case C-33/76) [1976] ECR 1989, para 5; Palmisani v Instituto Nazionale della Previdenze Sociale (INPS) (Case C-261/95) [1997] ECR I-4025, para 28; Fantask A/S v Industriministeriet (Erhvervsministeriet) (Case C-188/95) [1997] ECR I-6783, paras 48-52. This case law suggests that there is no general principle of EU law that there must be full reimbursement of the use value of money.
62. The obligation in principle on a member state to repay charges levied in breach of EU law, which is enshrined in cases such as San Giorgio and Société Comateb v Directeur Général des Douanes et Droits Indirects (Joined Cases C-192/95 to C-218/95) [1997] ECR I-165, was initially accompanied by rulings that, in the absence of EU rules governing the matter, the payment of interest on such sums was an ancillary problem to be settled in national law, whether it concerned the date from which interest was payable, the rate of interest or the method of calculation: for example Société Roquette Frères v Commission of the European Communities (Case 26/74) [1976] ECR 677, paras 11-13; Express Dairy Foods Ltd v Intervention Board for Agricultural Produce (Case 130/79) [1980] ECR 1887, paras 16 and 17; and Ansaldo Energia SpA v Amminstrazione delle Finanze dello Stato (Joined Cases C-279/96, C-280/96 and C-281/96) [1998] ECR I-5025, paras 27, 28 and 30.
“where the breach of Community law arises, not from the payment of the tax itself but from its being levied prematurely, the award of interest represents the ‘reimbursement’ of that which was improperly paid and would appear to be essential in restoring the equal treatment guaranteed by article 52 of the Treaty.”
In support of this view the CJEU referred (para 94) to Marshall (above) which we discuss further in para 65 below.
“where a member state has levied charges in breach of the rules of Community law, individuals are entitled to reimbursement not only of the tax unduly levied but also of the amounts paid to that state or retained by it which relate directly to that tax. As the court held in paras 87 and 88 of Metallgesellschaft, that also includes losses constituted by the unavailability of sums of money as a result of a tax being levied prematurely.”
While the CJEU spoke in this passage about the “reimbursement” of losses constituted by the unavailability of sums of money which gave rise to an entitlement to claim interest, it made no statement as to the rate or method of calculation of that interest, by which the use value of money might be compensated. It is unsurprising, therefore, that the CJEU in para 26 of its judgment in the present case deduced from the case law a general principle that the repayment of tax levied in breach of EU law had also to provide for the payment of interest, without specifying further the content of that right to interest.
65. The CJEU in the present case did not refer in its judgment to Marshall (above). But that case was cited to the court in argument and, as we have said, featured in the reasoning of the court in Metallgesellschaft. We have discussed the case of Marshall in para 47 above. In our view, the case is clearly to be distinguished from the present case because it was concerned with ascertaining the principal sum which should be paid to the claimant to remove the discriminatory treatment which she had suffered and to achieve equality of opportunity. The use by the CJEU in that case of the phrase “adequate” to describe the making good in full of the loss sustained as a result of her dismissal makes good sense in that context. But there are three reasons why we do not infer that the CJEU in the present case intended the phrase “an adequate indemnity” to have the same meaning in the context of interest. First, in Marshall the CJEU applied the principle of effectiveness in a contextual manner; as in the earlier case of von Colson v Land Nordrhein-Westfalen (Case 14/83) [1984] ECR 1891, the court had regard to the purpose of the Equal Treatment Directive in giving content to the principle in relation to the principal sum to be paid as compensation. Secondly, the court in Marshall addressed the claim for interest separately (para 31), holding that full compensation included taking account of the effluxion of time which might diminish the value of the award and that therefore an award of interest in accordance with the applicable national rules was an essential component of the compensation. Taking into account the diminution in value of a sum of money through the passage of time is not the same as compensation in full for the use value of money. Thirdly, as Henderson J recognised (para 282), the CJEU may have adopted the phrase “an adequate indemnity” from para 32 of the written observations submitted by the European Commission in support of the sufficiency of simple interest in which it spoke of such interest providing “adequate restitution or compensation”. The Advocate General summarised the Commission’s position by referring to this paragraph in her opinion (para 11). Marshall therefore is of no assistance.
66. Turning to the subsequent case law, we encounter the CJEU formulating the law in substantially the same way as it did in this case. Thus, in Zuckerfabrick Jülich AG v Hauptzollamt Aachen, British Sugar plc v Rural Payments Agency and Société Tereos v Directeur général des douanes et droits indirects (Joined Cases C-113/10, C-147/10 and C-234/10) EU:C:2012:591; [2012] All ER (D) 174 the CJEU in paras 65 and 66 repeated the reasoning in paras 25 and 26 in the judgment in this case and concluded (para 69) that individuals who were entitled to reimbursement of sums paid as production levies under invalid EU legislation were also entitled to interest on those sums. The member state was obliged to pay interest even though it could not recover the corresponding interest from the EU institution to which it had paid the invalid levies. But the CJEU did not rule on the method of calculating that interest.
“That loss depends, inter alia, on the duration of the unavailability of the sum unduly levied in breach of European Union law and thus occurs, in principle, during the period between the date of the undue payment of the tax at issue and the date of repayment thereof.”
In formulating its reasoning, the CJEU (at paras 20-23) again followed the pattern in its judgment in this case in paras 24-27. In summary, the CJEU confirmed that the right to repayment of unduly levied tax was accompanied by a right to interest on that tax from the date of payment until the date of repayment but it did not suggest that EU law required either the rate or the method of calculation of the interest payable to achieve full reimbursement of the use value of money during that period.
68. In Wortmann KG Internationale Schuhproduktionen v Hauptzollamt Bielefeld (Case C-365/15) EU:C:2017:19; [2017] All ER (D) 55 the CJEU was concerned with a claim for the repayment of import duties after EU legislation imposing an antidumping duty was annulled. The court addressed the question whether the relevant EU legislation establishing the Community Customs Code must be interpreted as meaning that national law, having regard to the principle of effectiveness, must provide for the payment of interest on the reimbursed import duties from the date of payment until their repayment, even in cases where no claim for reimbursement had been made in the national court. Advocate General Campos Sánchez-Bordona, in proposing that the CJEU give a positive answer to the question, relied on the court’s ruling in Irimie which, he suggested (paras 69-70), was based on reasoning that the taxpayer was not to be deprived of compensation “commensurate with the loss suffered”. But the CJEU in its judgment did not adopt any such principle but merely repeated its case law that parties who had paid taxes levied by a member state pursuant to an EU regulation which had been declared invalid or annulled by the CJEU had the right in principle to obtain not only the repayment of the amounts levied but also interest on those amounts (paras 37-38). Again, no ruling or comment was made as to the scope of a member state’s discretion in fixing the rate or the method of calculation of interest.
Summary on issue 2
Conclusion