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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 Barclays Bank Plc & Anor [2006] EWHC 2118 (Ch) (11 August 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/2118.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 2118 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE SPECIAL COMMISSIONER
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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Barclays Bank PLC The Trustees of the Barclays Bank Pension Fund |
Respondents |
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Jonathan Peacock QC and Philip Walford (instructed by Barclays Bank Plc) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 15 June 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice David Richards :
The facts
"(i) The payments were motivated by a combination of moral duty and a commercial desire to avoid hostility of the trade unions;
(ii) The payments were calculated on a planned, commercial basis, by reference to the complexity of the tax affairs of the pensioners;
(iii) The calculation of the payments was completed on a careful basis and only after considerable work and intense activity.
(iv) In so far as it is a question of fact the payments were not made in consideration of any past services provided by pensioners who had been employees of Barclays but rather to compensate the pensioners for loss of the tax related services."
The legislation
"(1) Where in any year of assessment a person receives a benefit provided under a retirement benefit scheme which is not of a description mentioned in section 596(1)(a), (b) or (c), tax shall be charged in accordance with the provisions of this section.
(2) Where the benefit is received by an individual, he shall be charged to tax under Schedule E for that year."
"611 Definition of "retirement benefits scheme"
(1) In this chapter "retirement benefits scheme" means …a scheme for the provision of benefits consisting of or including relevant benefits…
(2) References in this Chapter to a scheme include references to a deed, agreement, series of agreements, or other arrangements providing for relevant benefits notwithstanding that it relates or they relate only to –
(a) a small number of employees, or to a single employee, or
(b) the payment of a pension starting immediately on the making of the arrangements
612 Other interpretative provisions
(1)…"relevant benefits" means any pension, lump sum, gratuity or other like benefit given or to be given on retirement or on death, or in anticipation of retirement, or in connection with past service, after retirement or death..."
Jurisdictional issue
"For the record, and despite our providing you evidence of Barclays Bank Plc making the payment, it has never been explained why this point is of such crucial importance to the Inland Revenue. Given that both Barclays Bank Plc and the Trustees of the Pension Fund are parties to the action, the actual party making the payment is not, in our opinion, a live issue."
On that basis, HMRC agreed the statement of facts, which recorded that the payments were made directly by Barclays using the pension fund payroll and that they were not made by the Trustees or from the pension fund assets.
"Mr Peacock, on reflection and after consultation with Ms Simler, conceded that the absence of a determination on plc did not deprive me of jurisdiction. Mr Peacock said that he was now aware that the Payments made to the Pensioners, although made by plc, were made "by or under" the Trustees in that the Trustees' payroll had been used by plc in making the Payments to the Pensioners. The Trustees were "employers" or alternatively "intermediaries" for the purposes of the PAYE regime, according to Mr Peacock. Thus the Barclays Bank Pension Fund had an obligation to account for monies which had to be deducted under the PAYE regime by reason of Regulations 40 and 41, if the Payments were within the scope of section 569A. A determination could therefore be made on the Trustee under Regulation 49. Mr Peacock therefore conceded that there was no fundamental issue on jurisdiction and undertook not to raise this point again should the matter go further. Ms Simler was content with this resolution of the jurisdiction point."
So far as the parties were concerned, that was the end of the matter. It was not contended by the Trustees that the determinations should not have been issued against them.
"The trouble is that this point goes to jurisdiction. If the determination is on the wrong party who has no liability then I have no jurisdiction to hear the substantive point at all. The Trustees' appeal would have to succeed. It follows that I must address this point."
"Here, if plc had put the Trustees in funds and requested the Trustees to make the Payments to the Pensioners, the Trustees would be "employers" within TA 1988, section 203(1) and Regulation 2(1) of the Regulations. But the facts before me are that plc, having planned to make the Payments, done the work to calculate their quantum and communicated the fact that plc intended to make the Payments to the Pensioners, used the Trustees' payroll to make the Payments (by which I assume it is meant that the mechanism to pay the Payments to the Pensioners was the payroll usually used by the Trustees to pay pensions payments to the beneficiaries of the Barclays Bank Pension Fund Trust). The inference arises that plc simply requested the Trustees to deliver the Payments made by plc to the Pensioners in a convenient way." (emphasis added)
"Thus it seems that Mr Peacock's concession cannot confer jurisdiction on me. The Trustees, on the facts of this case, are not "employers" for TA 1988 purposes or the purposes of the 1993 Regulations and have no liability under Regulation 49 of the 1993 Regulations. The Trustees' appeal therefore succeeds. I address the substantive point, however, in case I am wrong on the jurisdiction point. It would be wholly misguided of me to fail to consider the substantive point given that both Counsel accepted that I do have jurisdiction and that this matter may well go further. I have had to consider the jurisdiction point, despite Mr Peacock's concession since if I am correct about the jurisdiction point, jurisdiction cannot be conferred on me by concession. And there is at least the prospect of this matter going further and the jurisdiction point only emerging before a higher Court which takes the point of its own motion."
"The Respondents accepted HMRC's view that if there were a tax liability, the determination could be made on the Trustees rather than the Bank. They do not seek to draw back from their acceptance of that view, nor do they seek to take any advantage of HMRC's present position. The Respondents stand by their admission that the use of the Trustees' payroll was sufficient to cause the payments to have been made by the Trustees for the purposes of the 1993 Regulations. They are quite content to fight the matter on the substantive issue."
Substantive issue
"68. The Payments are not "relevant benefits". The Payments were not given "in connection with [the] past services" of the Pensioners who had been employees of plc (or, I suppose, related companies). The Payments were certainly not consideration for the past services of past employees. Neither party has suggested otherwise. The Payments were made to assuage the perceived hostility of the Pensioners and the trade unions who represented them. Although the Payments would not have been made "but for" the past services of those former employees who were Pensioners, the Payments were motivated by and paid by reason only of the wish of plc to avoid the consequence of such hostility.
69. I accept that the term "in connection with" does not pose a causal test. Contrast the terms "by reason of" [employment] and "therefrom" [that is, "from" an employment] which were the terms in issue in Wilcock v Eve (supra). These latter terms clearly postulate a causal test. They ask whether the employment relationship caused, that is, gave rise to, the receipts under scrutiny.
70. The phrase "in connection with" is much wider. This phrase does not pose a causal test. So authorities such as Wilcock v Eve are of no assistance. Rather the phrase "in connection with" simply asks whether there is a link ("connection") between past services and the benefits referred to in Section 611(1). The test is one of fact and degree. However, it is not limitless. The quality and strength of the nexus which must be satisfied to establish the requisite "connection" between two items depends on the context of the statutory provision which is being construed. Here Section 612(1) which defines "relevant benefits" is defining "benefits" which have a sufficient connection to "past services" of employees to be characterised as effectively deferred emoluments (using the language of Schedule E).
71. In this case the Payments had no relevant "connection" to the past services of former employees other than those past services informed the class of beneficiaries of the trust of the Barclays Bank Pension Fund. The Payments were not any form of reward for those past services. They were paid to former employees and widows and widowers of former employees alike. The Payments were calculated, as Mr Peacock points out, by reference to the complexity of tax affairs, the age of the recipient of the tax services and the extent to which they used the services, without any reference to past services. All of these factors point the same way. The Payments were not in any sense deferred rewards for past services. It follows that the Payments are not "relevant benefits". It further follows that the Payments are not made "under" a "retirement benefits scheme" in this case."
Conclusion