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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Customs & Excise v Elm Milk Ltd [2006] EWCA Civ 164 (03 March 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/164.html Cite as: [2006] ICR 880, [2006] EWCA Civ 164 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM the High Court of Justice – Chancery Division
The Hon. Mr Justice Park
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
____________________
Commissioners of Customs & Excise |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Elm Milk Limited |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal WordWave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Oliver Conolly (instructed by Burges Salmon) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden:
The 1992 Order
"7(1) - Subject to paragraph (2) to (2H) below tax charged on –
(a) the supply . . . to a taxable person. . .
of a motor car shall be excluded from any credit under section 25 of the [1994] Act.
(2) Paragraph (1 ) above does not apply where
(a) the motor car is -
(i) a qualifying motor car;
(ii) supplied ... to ... a taxable person; and
(iii) the relevant condition is satisfied...
…
(2E) For the purposes of paragraph (2)(a) above the relevant condition is that the ... supply... is to a taxable person who intends to use the motor car either –
(a) exclusively for the purposes of a business carried on by him, but this is subject to paragraph (2G) below; or ...
(2G) A taxable person shall not be taken to intend to use a motor car exclusively for the purposes of a business carried on by him if he intends to ...
(a)…
(b) make it available (otherwise than by letting it on hire) to any person (including where the taxable person is an individual, himself, or where the taxable person is a partnership, a partner) for private use, whether or not for a consideration..."
The Background
The decision of this court in Customs & Excise Commissioners v Upton (trading as Fagomatic) [2001] STC 912
"21. It is plain that the test for the disqualifying condition of para (2G)(b) is of intention at the time of acquisition. The fact that a car is available or is made available to a person for private use subsequent to the acquisition is not determinative. However, that fact may be highly relevant to an inference that the taxable person has the intention to make the car available to himself for private use. I do not think that the Vice-Chancellor can fairly be criticised as having addressed the fact of the car's availability to Mr Upton for private use rather than his intention to make it so available. On the contrary he makes it clear that the issue is as to the nature of what is intended and that he had to consider whether, given that the car was available for private use, the taxable person intended to make it so.
22. I own to having been troubled at one time that the Vice-Chancellor was construing the language of para (2G)(b) by rewriting the words 'if he intends to ... make it available... to any person... for private use' so as, to mean 'unless he intends to ... take positive steps to make it unavailable... to any person... for private use', and that either such a construction was limited to the case of the individual taxable person intending to make the car available to himself for persona1 use, in which case the same words had a different meaning in their application to other taxable persons and other circumstances, or the rewriting applied to all taxable persons, in which case it was hard to justify the rewriting in circumstances other than where the individual taxable person was intending to make the car available to himself for personal use. However, I am persuaded by Mr Paines that the Vice-Chancellor was not attempting any such rewriting nor was he giving a different meaning to the words of para (2G) in differing circumstances. Rather the Vice-Chancellor was recognising that in the case of an individual taxable person who acquires a car there is a particular difficulty in the way of that person if he is to escape from the disqualifying condition that 'he intends to ... make it available... to ... himself... for private use'. The very fact of his deliberate acquisition of the car whereby he makes himself the owner of the car and controller of it means that at least ordinarily he must intend to make it available to himself for private use, even if he never intends to use it privately. The Vice-Chancellor appeared to contemplate that there might be ways in which that result could be avoided by action taken by the individual taxable person such as would lead to the inference that the relevant intention was absent. But whether or not that possibility is a real one, the Vice-Chancellor thought it plain that in the present case there was no material to enable the tribunal to conclude that Mr Upton did not intend to make the car available to himself for private use. The Vice-Chancellor was therefore giving the same meaning to the language of para (2G)(b) in relation to Mr Upton as he would give to that language in relation to, say, a corporate taxable person, but he was recognising the peculiar problem poised for an individual taxable person acquiring a car.
[23] The tribunal appear not to have recognised the difficulty but to have treated the test of para (2G)(b) as being in effect the same as that of para (2E), so that if the taxable person intends to use the car exclusively for the purposes of a business carried on by him, he could not intend to make it available to himself for private use: hence their emphatic finding in para 13 that Mr Upton did not intend to use the car privately and in para 15 their seeing force in the submission that para (2G) was mere surplusage. It is also reflected in the fact that nowhere do the tribunal say that Mr Upton did not intend to make the car available to himself for personal use. The closest they get to it is in the final sentence of para 16 when they say that there is no evidence whatever to suggest that he intended to make the car available. The tribunal's concluding remarks are, with respect, not easy to follow. But what is plain is that the tribunal did not recognise that Mr Upton's deliberate action in acquiring the car and obtaining insurance permitting private use was to make the car available to himself for private use and that he must be taken to have intended that result in the absence of evidence to the contrary even if he did not intend to use the car privately. In my judgment, the tribunal erred in law in their approach to, and application of, the disqualifying condition of para (2G)(b)."
"28. The first issue is, therefore what the draftsman meant by 'make available for use'. That is an ordinary English expression, deliberately different from 'use' itself. An object can be available for use without there being any present intention of actually using it just as, for instance, a person can be available for, say, military service without there being any intention that he should serve or be asked to serve.
29. The question has to be decided as at the moment of acquisition of the car. On the facts of the present case, I see no escape from the conclusion that the car was at that moment, as a matter of fact, available for Mr Upton's private use, however little he then had an intention of actually so using it. He had sole control over the car. It was not to be disabled or in any other way put beyond use: quite the reverse, since the whole purpose of buying it was so that it could be use, albeit in the business and not privately. A further way of testing this point, if it needs further exposition would be to ask whether the car was available for Mr Upton's use, generally stated. That question answers itself. And Mr Upton did not restrict the general nature of that that availability by deciding that he would only use the car for one of the two purposes for which at the time of purchase, it became available.
30. Further, I see no escape from the conclusion that Mr Upton had made the car available to himself. He did that, tautologically enough, by providing himself, with ownership and control of the car. And, as we have seen, the availability that was created was availability for private as well as for business use.
31. Did Mr Upton at the moment of purchase intend to make the car available to himself for private use? The question is not whether he intended to use it, but whether he intended to make it available for use. That again seems to me to lead to a short answer. The first question, of whether what was done constituted a making available for private use, is answered, in the terms urged above, by analysis of what Mr Upton did in the context of the true construction of the statutory concept of making available for private use. Mr Upton unquestionably intended to do the acts that, on that true construction, constituted the making available of the car for private use. He therefore necessarily intended to make the car so available, by intending to do the acts that constituted making the car available for use. He cannot escape from that conclusion by saying, as he does, that he did not intend actual use; or that, for that reason, he did not regard the car as available for use. If he intends to do the acts that are in law the state of affairs referred to in the statute, the he intends that state of affairs as statutorily defined."
"40. Ignoring, for the moment, the unusual concept of a person making his own property available to himself, what does the provision mean when it refers to an intention to make motor car available to a person other than the taxpayer for private use? In this connection, it is important to bear in mind, as Mr Paines QC, for the commissioners, says, that art 7 (2G)(b) does not refer to an intention that the motor car be put to the use in question: the intention must be to make it available for that use. The difference between the two concepts appears to me to be emphasised by the contrast with art 7(2E) which requires the taxpayer to show that he 'intends to use' the motor car exclusively for business purposes.
41. If an article is supplied by one person to another with no physical or legal restraint as to a particular use, then it appears to me that, as a matter of ordinary language, the article has been 'made available' for that use. The fact that neither the supplier nor the recipient expects, or even intends, the article to be put to the particular use does not prevent the article being 'available' for that use, if there is no physical or legal restraint on such use by the recipient. Further, it cannot be said, at any rate as a matter of ordinary language that the supplier does not 'make' the article available for that use, simply because he does not expect or intend it to be put to that use. If he supplies the article so that it is, as a matter of fact, available for a particular use, then he has, in normal practice, made it available for that use. On the other hand, if the supplier provides the article under a contract which bona fide precludes the recipient from putting it to a particular use, or if it is supplied only at such times that it cannot be put to a particular use, then there is clearly a powerful argument for saying that it has not been 'made available' for such use.
42. The fact that the article is also made available for other purposes, even primarily for other purposes, does not alter this conclusion. If a motor car or other article is supplied to a recipient in circumstances where he can put it to, among other uses, private use, then, as I see it, as a matter of ordinary language the supplier 'make[s] it available … for private use'. That appears to me to be reinforced in this case by the absence in art 7(2G)(b) of the word 'exclusively', found in art 7(2E)(a). Article 7(2G)(b) requires one to consider the intention of the taxpayer with regard to making the motor car available for a particular use. Accordingly, to my mind, the proper inquiry is, as the commissioners contend, whether the taxpayer intends to supply the motor car to a third party in circumstances where it could be available for private use. The intention in question, is concerned with the basis on which the motor car is to be made available to the recipient, not with the use to which the motor car is to be put by the recipient."
. . .
48. Accordingly, I have reached the same conclusion as the Vice-Chancellor, for the same reasons. A point that gives pause for further thought is that the consequence of this conclusion may be to render it very difficult for a sole trader, who acquires a motor car exclusively for his business, thereby satisfying art 7 (2E) (b), to avoid falling foul of art 7(2G) (b). It was suggested on behalf of the commissioners during argument that, if a sole trader acquired a motor car for the sole use of employees in his business, and arranged for the motor car to be housed some distance away from his home, and for the keys to be kept by an employee, with a view to its only being used for business purposes, the motor car would not thereby be made available for private use. I find that difficult to accept. The person in control of the motor car and of the keys would be an employee of the trader, and could be compelled to provide him with the motor car and the keys for whatever purpose the trader chose. Accordingly, while it is unnecessary to express a concluded view on the point, I think that the logical consequence of the Vice-Chancellor's decision is that a sole trader who purchases a motor car with that sort of arrangement in mind would not avoid the consequences of art 7 (2G) (b).
49. The commissioners contended, as the Vice-Chancellor recorded ([2001]) STC 912 at 917), that a motor car would not be available for private use if it were-
'... physically unavailable, that is to say a car let to another, or is realistically incapable of private use, for example marked police cars or ambulances, or alternatively is insulated from the possibility of private use, that is to say pool cars issued to employees for business use only.'
As already indicated, I have some difficulty with the last example, at least where the taxpayer who has acquired the motor car is a sole trader. However, as mentioned, I think it is also possible that a legal impediment to private use, so that such use would be unlawful, might also amount to unavailability for private use. An obvious example would be where a motor car was only insured for business use. However, it is unnecessary to decide whether that would be sufficient to enable a sole trader taxpayer to avoid the effect of art 7 (2G) (b). Even if only physical unavailability will do, I do not think the fact that the Vice-Chancellor's decision would lead to it being difficult for a sole trader to be able to take advantage of art 7 (2E) justifies a different conclusion from that which he reached."
Submissions
Conclusions
Community Law
Satisfaction of the art 7 conditions in this case
Purposive interpretation
Meaning of "available" in art.7 (2G)
The tribunal's error of fact (the subsidiary ground of appeal)
"37. There is one other detailed matter which I must mention. I have recorded that the insurance cover note for the Mercedes specified four drivers not just Mr Phillips, but also his wife, his son and his son's fiancée. Mr Beale submits that this is an indication that Elm Milk must have intended to make the car available for private use of Mrs Phillips, her daughter and her daughter's fiancé. He also says that this argument is not adequately dealt with by the Tribunal. On that last point, to some extent I agree with him. A complicating factor here is that the documents before the Tribunal included, not just the cover note for the Mercedes, but also the insurance certificate for Mrs Phillips' Rover. The Tribunal unfortunately mixed the two up. In paragraph 14 of its decision it wrote:
"Persons entitled to drive the Mercedes motor car included Mrs M Phillips, as policyholder, and anyone driving with her permission."
That sentence reflected the insurance certificate note for the Rover. It did not reflect the cover note for the Mercedes. In relation to the Mercedes, the correct position would have been to say that, the persons entitled to drive under the insurance policy inc1uded the four persons named on the cover note.
38. In paragraph 21 of the Tribunal's decision it dealt briefly with Customs and Excise's argument that, because the insurance cover was not limited to business use, Elm Milk's claim to recover the input tax fell foul of Article 7(2G)(b). It wrote this:
"The fact that the insurance cover permits private use is beside the point. If Mr Phillips were to use the car for a non-business purpose, he would be acting in defiance of the Board resolution, which contained the relevant terms of his employment. That resolution was, we are satisfied, intended to be acted upon. On that basis, it would have been a breach of the employee's terms of employment to have used the motor car for private purposes: resolution 1.4."
39. I have reflected on whether, in view of the confusion between the two different insurance contracts, I should remit the matter to the Tribunal for it to reconsider its decision, solely in the light of the correct position on the insurance, having in mind in particular the inclusion of Mrs Phillips, her son and his fiancée as persons authorised to drive the car. However, in the end I have decided not to do that. Given that in any event the insurance certificate which the Tribunal wrongly thought related to the Mercedes did not limit the permitted drivers to Mr Phillips, and given also the c1ear, strong and unimpeachable findings of fact elsewhere in the decision, particularly the passages which I have quoted above, I think it is inevitable that if I did remit the case, the Tribunal would reaffirm its conclusion. I would have subjected the parties to expense and delay to no purpose"
Disposition
Lord Justice Moore-Bick:
Lord Justice Ward: