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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Customs & Excise v JDL Ltd [2001] EWHC 2200 (Ch) (25 October 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2001/2200.html Cite as: [2001] EWHC 2200 (Ch), [2002] STC 1 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE COMMISSIONERS OF CUSTOMS & EXCISE | Appellants | |
and | ||
JDL LIMITED | Respondent | |
JUDGMENT |
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Hearing: 19 and 20 July 2001
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HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lawrence Collins
I Introduction
II The facts
III The legislation
Input tax credits and the VAT position on cars
Apportionment
"there shall be attributed to taxable supplies such proportion of the input tax on such of those goods or services as are used or to be used by him in making both taxable and exempt supplies as bears the same ratio to the total of such input tax as the value of taxable supplies made by him bears to the value of all supplies made by him in the [prescribed accounting] period."
Exclusion of capital goods
"In calculating the proportion under paragraph (2)(d) above, there shall be excluded—(a) any sum receivable by the taxable person in respect of any supply of capital goods used by him for the purposes of his business".
"The factors mentioned in this paragraph must be excluded from the calculation of the proportion lest, being unrepresentative of the taxable person's business activity, they should deprive the amount of any real significance. Such is the case with sales of capital items and real estate and financial transactions which are only ancillary operations, that is to say are only of secondary importance in relation to the total turnover of the business. These factors are only excluded if they are not part of the usual business activity of the taxable person."
"If, however, certain transactions (the incidental transactions) are excluded again from the calculation of the deductible proportion, that can only mean that if these transactions were taken into consideration the result would be distorted. That will have to be taken into account … in determining the concept of incidental transactions.
…
Article 17(5) provides for cases in which goods and services are used for the taxable person's economic activity where that activity consists both of transactions which give a right to deduct and transactions for which there is no such right. No right to deduct may be claimed for the latter, because, for instance, they are transactions of negotiation of credit, on which the taxable person himself has not had to pay VAT. There is no apparent reason why in such a case, for example, transaction exempt from VAT under Art 13B(d) should not be included in the denominator of the fraction for calculating the deductible percentage
…
I shall now explain what is to be understood by the concept 'distortion' in this connection: the criterion for the application of Art 17(5) and with it the calculation of the deductible proportion is the use of the taxable person's business asserts for taxed transactions, which thus entail a right to deduct, and of transactions which do not entail such a right. But the turnover attributable to every transaction is included in the calculation of the deductible proportion. That is, as long as the resources utilised are to some extent related to the transactions arising (taxed or untaxed), there are no difficulties. The position is different, however, if the resources applied are slender but the transaction for which they are used is proportionally much greater. Then this relatively substantial transaction has the effect of reducing the deduction. The relevant turnover is included in its entirety in the denominator although only slender resources were used for the transaction. The diminution of the deduction therefore becomes disproportionately high."
The Verbond case
"It should be noted, in the first place, that the expression at issue forms part of a provision of Community law which does not refer to the law of the Member States for the determining of its meaning and its scope.
It follows that the interpretation, in general terms, of the expression cannot be left to the discretion of each Member State.
The ordinary meaning of the expression and its function in the context of the provisions of the Second Directive indicate that it covers goods used for the purposes of some business activity and distinguishable by their durable nature and their value and such that the acquisition costs are not normally treated as current expenditure but written off over several years.
…
The Member States …have a certain margin of discretion as regards those requirements, provided that they pay due regard to the existence of an essential difference between capital goods and the other goods used in the management and day to day running of undertakings."
IV The decision of the Tribunal
V The Commissioners' arguments
VI Conclusions
43. Reg. 101(3) (c) provides that in calculating the relevant proportion there shall be excluded: "That part of the value of any supply of goods on which output tax is not chargeable by virtue of any order made by the Treasury under section 25(7) of the Act…" Output tax is not chargeable at all on the entire value of the supply of the demonstrator cars by JDL by virtue of Art. 13(B)(c) of the Sixth Directive. For the reasons mentioned in paragraphs 15-16, JDL has asserted a directly effective EC law right leading to the disapplication, at its option, of the domestic secondary legislation, in particular Art. 7(4) of the Input Tax Order. I see very great force in the Commissioners' argument that, having asserted a directly effective right under the Sixth Directive, JDL cannot now say that during the period in question Art. 7(4) of the Input Tax Order, which was made under section 25(7) of the 1994 Act, had the effect that part of the value of the supply was not chargeable by virtue of any order made under section 25(7).
Note 1 The “standard method”, in Reg. 101(2) of the 1995 Regulations, was applicable to JDL at the material time, no special method having been approved or directed by the Commissioners. [Back] Note 2 This appeal relates solely to the period before the Order was amended in 1999. [Back]