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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 >> HM Revenue & Customs v Fenwood Developments Ltd [2005] EWHC 2954 (Ch) (16 December 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/2954.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 2954 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE VAT & DUTIES TRIBUNAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
COMMISSIONERS FOR HM REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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FENWOOD DEVELOPMENTS LIMITED |
Respondent |
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David Milne QC and Andrew Hitchmough (instructed by Bryan & Armstrong) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 13th December 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
The Chancellor :
"a home or other institution providing residential accommodation with personal care for persons in need of personal care by reason of....past or present mental disorder."
The same note excepts from all parts of the definition:
"use as a hospital, prison or similar institution or an hotel, inn or similar establishment."
By note (12) (b) thereto
"a...supply....shall not be taken as relating to a building intended for such use unless before it is made the person to whom it is made has given to the person making it a certificate....stating that...the supply...so relates."
"It seems to me that the Dene fails the requirement for zero-rating under two provisions. The Dene is similar to a hospital and a prison. I therefore do not accept that the construction of the Dene was eligible for zero rate relief under the provisions of Group 5 of Schedule 8 to the VAT Act 1994."
(1) the Tribunal wrongly construed and/or applied the relevant provisions of Group 5 in determining that the Dene was not either (a) a hospital or similar institution, or (b) a prison or similar institution;
(2) the Tribunal was wrong to conclude that the assessment had not been made to 'best judgment' because CR&C was entitled to use current actual use as the best evidence of intended use, that they had done so with the consequence that the correct test had been applied.
I will deal with those issues in that order but first I should set out the relevant statutory provisions in full and refer to the decision of the Tribunal in more detail.
"(4) Use for a relevant residential purpose means use as—
(a) a home or other institution providing residential accommodation for children;
(b) a home or other institution providing residential accommodation with personal care for persons in need of personal care by reason of old age, disablement, past or present dependence on alcohol or drugs or past or present mental disorder;
(c) a hospice;
(d) residential accommodation for students or school pupils;
(e) residential accommodation for members of any of the armed forces;
(f) a monastery, nunnery or similar establishment; or
(g) an institution which is the sole or main residence of at least 90 per cent. of its residents,
except use as a hospital, a prison or similar institution or an hotel, inn or similar establishment."
"11. Pastoral's philosophy was one of providing a care-based system to its female patients; its patients were usually the victims of severe sexual or physical abuse, and it intended them to live as normally as possible. It took only patients for whom ordinary psychiatric hospitals could do no more, and aimed to provide them with a home, if necessary, for life.
12. Pastoral typically offered homes to women who had been detained under the terms of the Mental Health Act 1983 ("the 1983 Act"), such detention commonly been known as sectioning. But being under section was not a requisite of residence at the Dene. Before admission to a Pastoral home, patients would have been admitted to a hospital for preliminary diagnosis, assessment and treatment. Treatment they might have received prior to admission to a Pastoral home would have included ECT (electro convulsive treatment), intensive psychological intervention, and regular assessment. Pastoral did not provide any diagnostic services, for those for whom it catered could not be treated in the conventional sense. Essentially it offered accommodation for women who no longer needed, or could no longer benefit from, hospital treatment, e.g. those diagnosed as having personality disorders, a history of self-harm, being labelled as difficult to manage, or having been socially or educationally deprived. Pastoral did not accept patients in an acute phase of illness, and any of its patients who needed acute intervention were transferred to hospital for treatment. The accommodation was intended to become their permanent residence for the foreseeable future. To that end they were invited to decorate it to their own taste, and furnish it. They were allowed to keep pets. Short stay patients were not admitted.
13. Pastoral's objective was to encourage its patients to live full lives within whatever constraints and limitations their mental conditions necessarily imposed upon them. It aimed to supply care, rather than specific treatments. Its model of care was not treatment based. Residents went out for meals, attended courses outside the Dene in subjects such as computer studies, went horse riding, attended church, sometimes unaccompanied. To assist them they received allowances similar to pocket money. Their names were included on the local electoral roll."
The conclusions of the Tribunal on the various issues before them are succinctly expressed in paragraphs 46 and 50 to 53. I shall refer to them when considering the submissions made to me on this appeal.
"50. It will be recalled that we earlier found that Pastoral took only patients for whom ordinary psychiatric hospitals could do no more, intending to provide them with a home, if necessary for life; its philosophy was care based; it aimed to supply care rather than specific treatments; and it did not accept patients in an acute phase of illness, and transferred to a hospital any patient whose condition necessitated acute intervention. Those for whom it catered could not be treated in the conventional sense.
51. Viewed against that factual background, we conclude that the main purpose of the Dene, as operated by Pastoral, was to take care of its residents and make life more comfortable for them, rather than to treat them for their various conditions by the exercise of professional skill. It follows that we hold that the Dene was not intended to operate as a "hospital or similar institution". We also hold that it was a home or other institution providing residential accommodation with personal care for persons in need of personal care by reason of past or present mental disorder within note (4)(b)."
"premises used or intended to be used for the reception of and the provision of nursing or other medical treatment (including care, habilitation, and rehabilitation under medical supervision) for, one or more mentally disordered patients...whether exclusively or in common with other persons."
S.22(2) makes it clear that a national health or local authority hospital is not included. By contrast s.1 requires the registration of
"any establishment which provides or is intended to provide...residential accommodation with both board and personal care for persons in need of personal care by reason of old age, disablement, past or present dependence on alcohol or drugs, or past or present mental disorder."
"Prisons are intended to accommodate only those convicted of criminal offences, or those remanded in custody pending trial for such offences. In those circumstances, we are not prepared to extend the meaning of "prisons or similar institutions" in the exception to note (4) to buildings intended to house anyone other than convicted criminals, or persons charged with criminal offences who have been remanded in custody. It follows that we hold that the Dene is not a "prison or similar institution".
"It is plain from Miss O'Sullivan's letter of 7 August 2001 that the Commissioners did apply the wrong test in deciding that Fenwood's supplies to Pastoral were standard-rated. And whilst we accept Mr Poole's point that in making their decision the Commissioners were entitled to consider the actual use of the Dene shortly after it opened, that does not excuse their failure to apply the correct test. We need merely say that the Commissioners erred in considering only the actual use of the Dene following its completion. In those circumstances, in our judgment the assessment under appeal must have been made arbitrarily, and therefore not to best judgment."
"The Dene is an institution used as a hospital....or as an institution similar to a hospital." [emphasis added]
There is no allegation as to the relevant intention to be found in either the original assessment or the amended statement of case.