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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> K Pub Trading Ltd & Anor v Cardiff City & Anor [2021] EWHC 3011 (Admin) (15 November 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2021/3011.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 3011 (Admin) |
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(2) CO/949/2021 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
2 Park Street, Cardiff, CF10 1ET |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a judge of the High Court
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(1) K PUB TRADING LIMITED (2) P TRADING LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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CARDIFF CITY AND COUNTY COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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Mr Christopher Royle and Mr Phillip Gale (instructed by Wilkin Chapman LLP) for the defendant
Hearing dates: 1 October 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
HH JUDGE JARMAN QC:
"43 Occupied hereditaments liability.
(1) A person (the ratepayer) shall as regards a hereditament be subject to a non-domestic rate in respect of a chargeable financial year if the following conditions are fulfilled in respect of any day in the year—
(a) on the day the ratepayer is in occupation of all or part of the hereditament, and
(b) the hereditament is shown for the day in a local non-domestic rating list in force for the year."
"45 Unoccupied hereditaments: liability.
(1) A person (the ratepayer) shall as regards a hereditament be subject to a non-domestic rate in respect of a chargeable financial year if the following conditions are fulfilled in respect of any day in the year—
(a) on the day none of the hereditament is occupied,
(b) on the day the ratepayer is the owner of the whole of the hereditament,
(c) the hereditament is shown for the day in a local non-domestic rating list in force for the year, and
(d) on the day the hereditament falls within a prescribed by the Secretary of State by regulations."
"In Hastings Borough Council v Tarmac Properties Ltd [1985] 1 EGLR 161 Lawton LJ said that the mischief with which the relevant statutory provisions were intended to deal "can be clearly identified. Parliament wanted to stop the owners of premises … leaving them unoccupied to suit their own convenience and to their own financial advantage.""
"…in the present case we consider that the words "entitled to possession" in section 65(1) of the 1988 Act as the badge of ownership triggering liability for business rates are properly construed as being concerned with a real and practical entitlement which carries with it in particular the ability either to occupy the property in question, or to confer a right to its occupation on someone else, and thereby to decide whether or not to bring it back into occupation."
"It may be that other factual situations may demonstrate that this test needs some further adjustment. For example the letting of unoccupied business property by a parent company to a wholly owned and controlled subsidiary would not of itself cause the subsidiary to fail to satisfy the ownership test merely because the management of the affairs of the subsidiary (including whether to bring the premises back into occupation) rested with the parent's board. We would, however, reject the criticism that the test is insufficiently certain. In any ordinary case the test will easily be satisfied by identifying the person who is entitled to possession as matter of the law of real property. The fact that the law of real property may not prove a reliable guide in an unusual case of the present kind is not in our view an objection to our preferred interpretation. The value of legal certainty does not extend to construing legislation in a way which will guarantee the effectiveness of transactions undertaken solely to avoid the liability which the legislation seeks to impose."
"4.—(1) For each chargeable financial year a charging authority shall, in accordance with regulations 5 to 7, serve a notice in writing on every person who is a ratepayer of the authority in relation to the year.
5.—(1) Subject to paragraph (2), a demand notice shall be served on or as soon as practicable after–
(a)except in a case falling within sub-paragraph (b), 1st April in the relevant year, or
(b)if the conditions mentioned in section 43(1) or 45(1) of the Act are not fulfilled in respect of that day as regards the ratepayer and the hereditament concerned, the first day after that day in respect of which such conditions are fulfilled as regards them."
" In summary, therefore, a failure to serve a Regulation 5 notice as soon as practicable does not result in automatic invalidity. Rather, the court determining any issue resulting from such a failure will have regard to the length of delay and the impact of that delay upon the ratepayer, in the context of the public interest in collecting outstanding rates. The greater the prejudice to the ratepayer flowing from the delay, the more likely will be the conclusion that Parliament intended invalidity to follow.
Prejudice may flow to business ratepayers in any number of ways as a result of a late notice to pay rates. Prejudice is different from inconvenience…the prejudice relied upon must be substantial and certainly not technical or contrived. It is in that way that I shall consider the question of prejudice argued for by the defendants in these proceedings. The countervailing public interest is in the collection of taxes, the interests of other tax payers and the revenues of the local authority concerned."
"In the context of an obligation to serve notices under Regulation 5 of the 1989 Regulations, Parliament can be taken to have been well aware of the constraints under which billing authorities operate in terms of manpower and resources. That is so whether a billing authority administers the system in-house, or has contracted others to perform the services. To that extent, the Webster definition: 'possible to be accomplished within known means and resources' can properly be applied to the obligation under Regulation 5. That, in my judgment, is for practical purposes synonymous with 'feasible'. A billing authority will not be able to rely upon the suggestion that home-grown problems and inefficiencies rendered impracticable what would otherwise have been practicable."
"Talk of "piercing the corporate veil" is a metaphor that is liable to obscure more than it illuminates. As Lord Sumption said at the start of his discussion of the topic in Prest [v Petrodel Resources Ltd [2013] UKSC 34] (at para 16): "'Piercing the corporate veil' is an expression rather indiscriminately used to describe a number of different things. Properly speaking, it means disregarding the separate personality of the company."
The separate personality of a company refers - as Lord Sumption had already noted at para 8 - to the doctrine that a company is treated in law as a person in its own right, capable of owning property and having rights and liabilities of its own which are distinct from those of its shareholders. In Salomon v A Salomon & Co Ltd [1897] AC 22 the House of Lords confirmed that this doctrine applies as much to a company that is wholly owned and controlled by one individual as to any other company; so too does the rule of limited liability, which limits the liability of a shareholder for debts of the company to the amount invested by the shareholder in the company.
65. In Prest Lord Sumption proposed that two distinct principles underlie the cases apparently concerned with piercing the corporate veil. The first, which he called the "concealment principle", involves the interposition of a company or perhaps several companies to conceal the true nature of an arrangement. In these cases, the court is merely looking behind the company to discover the facts which the corporate structure is concealing and applying the ordinary legal or equitable principles to those facts. This concealment principle "is legally banal and does not involve piercing the corporate veil at all" (para 28). The second principle, which Lord Sumption dubbed the "evasion principle", was said to comprise "a small residual category of cases where the abuse of the corporate veil to evade or frustrate the law can be addressed only by disregarding the legal personality of the company" (para 35). This principle was said to apply: "when a person is under an existing legal obligation or liability or subject to an existing legal restriction which he deliberately evades or whose enforcement he deliberately frustrates by interposing a company under his control. The court may then pierce the corporate veil for the purpose, and only for the purpose, of depriving the company or its controller of the advantage that they would otherwise have obtained by the company's separate legal personality.""