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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 >> Spearmint Rhino Ventures (UK) Ltd v HM Revenue & Customs [2007] EWHC 613 (Ch) (23 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/613.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 613 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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SPEARMINT RHINO VENTURES (UK) LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR H.M. REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondent |
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MR D. GOY Q.C. and MS. N. SHAW (instructed by The Solicitor's Office of HM Revenue & Customs) for the Respondent.
Hearing dates: 18th January 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Introduction
Outline facts
The documents
"Owner is desirous of licensing to a Performer the right to use certain private and/or public areas of the Premises for purposes of presenting live nude, semi-nude and/or bikini entertainment to the adult general public pursuant to and in accordance with this Licence."
And paragraph 3 provides:
"(3) Performer is desirous of licensing the premises for the purposes of performing live nude, semi-nude and/or bikini entertainment to the adult general public pursuant to and in accordance with this Licence."
"A. Owner licenses to Performer the right during normal business hours to use those parts of the Premises designated by the Owner for the performing of live nude, semi-nude and/or bikini entertainment known as 'Booths' upon the terms and conditions set out below.
B. Performer shall exercise her rights under this licence in respect of the Booths at the Premises by occupying whichever Booth that she may for the time being chose [sic] together with a customer and, if relevant, another Performer.
C. Whilst in occupation of a Booth, Performer shall have the right to exclude and admit all others as she shall choose.
D. In return for her right to occupy a Booth, Performer shall pay the Licence Fee stipulated in clause 4 below.
E. Performer's rights to occupy a Booth under this clause will be for the duration of each dance that she performs in the Booth."
"Owner shall make the Premises available to the Performer and the Performer hereby agrees to take up the licence in respect of the Premises for a minimum of three (3) sets per week. Once scheduled, neither Performer nor owner shall have the right to cancel or change any scheduled sets except upon material breech [sic] as defined below or as mutually agreed."
Thus there is some form of obligation on the dancer to attend a minimum number of sessions. The clause goes on to provide for liquidated damages to be payable to the club for each session missed.
"Performer agrees to:
(a) perform nude, semi-nude and/or bikini entertainment at the premises for the general public during all hours of each set. Performer hereby specifically acknowledges that Performer's agreement to perform such entertainment during all set periods of time is a material obligation under this Licence. In consultation with Performers who enjoy licences in respect of the premises, Owner shall establish a fixed fee for the price of chair, table and couch dances performed in the premises ('Dance Performance Fees') and Performer agrees not to charge a customer more than the fixed price for any such dance performance, although nothing contained in this licence shall limit the Performer from obtaining 'tips' and/or gratuities over and above the established price for such dances. The parties acknowledge and agree, however, that Dance Performance Fees are neither tips nor gratuities, but are rather charges to the customer as consideration for the services of obtaining a dance performance. Performer recognises that her obligations as set forth in this paragraph are material considerations to the Owner in order to (i) produce the maximum gross sales possible from dance performances during the term of this licence for the benefit of both Owner and Performer, and (ii) assure regular maximum operation of entertainment at the premises for the benefit of both Owner and Performer;
(b) use her best efforts in connection with the performance of her entertainment at the premises;
…..
(f) maintain accurate daily records of all the income earned from and at the Premises during this Licence in accordance with all applicable taxation laws…."
"A. The parties acknowledge that the status created between Owner and Performer is that of Licensor and Licensee in relation to the premises, and that this status is a material consideration of this licence. The parties specifically disavow any employment relationship, and agree that this licence shall not be interpreted as creating an employer/employee relationship."
Sub-clause B is a curious clause apparently designed to operate were it somehow to be found that the dancer was an employee of the club. It provides:
"B. Performer specifically acknowledges that were the relationship between Owner and Performer to be that of employer/employee, Owner would be entitled to collect and retain all Dance Performance Fees collected by Performer from Customers – said funds being acknowledged in the circumstances of an employer/employee relationship to be the sole and exclusive property of the Owner …. The parties specifically acknowledge that Performer's entitlement to obtain and retain Dance Performance Fees pursuant to this licence is contingent and conditional upon the acknowledged status of the parties as is set forth in sub-clause 7(A). The parties additionally acknowledge that were the relationship between them to be that of employer and employee, Owner would be entitled to control Performer's work schedule and hours of work; physical presentation; costumes and other wearing apparel; music; work habits; the selection of her customers; the nature, content, character, manner and means of her performances; and her ability to perform at or for other locations or businesses. Performer desires to control all these matters to the exclusion of Owner, and Owner and Performer agree by the terms of this licence that all such matters are exclusively reserved to the decisions of the Performer. Performer specifically represents that she does not desire to perform as an employee of Owner subject to terms 7 and conditions outlined in this sub-paragraph, but rather desires to perform consistent with other provisions of this licence as a licensee."
"Owner shall have no right to direct and/or control the nature, content, character, manner or means of Performer's performance. Performer acknowledges and agrees, however, to perform live nude, semi-nude and/or bikini entertainment consistent with the type of entertainment regularly performed at the premises."
"Owner shall, in addition to the licensing of the premises as set forth above:
A. Provide to the Performer at Owner's expense music used on the premises, lighting and dressing room facilities;
B. Pay any and/all copyright fees due relative to the music used on the premises;
C. Advertise the business in a commercially reasonable manner for the benefit of both Performer and Owner…."
"23. Topless table dances and full nude table dances may be performed for a pre-determined rate as set by the individual Club.
24. Dancers are required from time to time to participate in promotional activities and offers as designated by the Club manager.
25. Dancers are required from time to time to participate in stage and podium performances as designated by Club staff."
"To our valued customers
TABLE DANCE FEES
Topless table dances are £10.00 per track
Nude table dances are £20.00 per track
…..dancers are under exclusive contracts to perform at this club and not considered employees. Table dance fees, as detailed above, are fees and not tips that are set by the club and may not be varied by a dancer. Dancers in turn pay the club a commission set by the club in which they perform. Tips for main and other stage performances and elsewhere voluntarily given by customers are considered gratuitous and the club receives no portion thereof.
At times a dancer will suggest her company for a period of an hour. If agreed, the standard rate is £250. It is negotiable how many dances, topless or nude, are performed within this period of time. Both parties at the start of the period the company is provided must agree the fee and times…. We enforce that customers may not inappropriately touch dancers during the stage and table side performances and we will strictly enforce such rules and ask customers with inappropriate behaviour to leave the premises immediately."
The supervision of dancers
The Decision
"… each dancer is committed in contract, from the time she is engaged for the session until her departure from the premises after the session is over, to perform in SR's entertainment business and, using her own skills to 'maximise gross sales', to entertain individual customers of SR by dancing or participating in sit-downs. The money side of the arrangement between dancer and SR is agreed between them. SR is, as regard [sic] each session entitled to specified amounts from the dancer … the dancer is free to keep whatever cash or rhinos the customer gives her. The duration of the dancer's engagement is agreed. The dancer's right of access (her license) is agreed. SR agrees to make its customers and the benefit of all its facilities available to the dancer. The dancer agrees that SR's management may continue to supervise her."
"59. We think that, in the light of those features, there is a contractual framework within which SR provides the relevant services to the customer through the dancers as agents. The dancer is at SR's premises to perform and that is the means by which SR conducts its own entertainment there."
"The tariff fee for the dance and the agreed fee for the sit-down will clearly be consideration due to SR."
The basis of the appeal and the contentions of the parties
The proper analysis
"when the dancer supplies her services to the customer, she is doing so as a principal in her own right (as SR contends) or, as the Customs contends, a self-employed person acting on behalf of or for the account of SR".
The question is therefore one of agency, as each side accepted. It was also common ground that the dancers were self-employed, but that does not determine the question of agency. Mr Goy put his case most starkly when he submitted that when a dancer agrees to dance, she enters into that agreement on behalf of and as agent for the club. The question for me is whether that is right or not. I shall consider that question on the basis of the facts before turning to the impact of authority.
"This recital of the arguments tending in each direction shows very clearly that a decision in a case like this may not be an easy one, and that on deceptively similar-looking factors different tribunals may come to different decisions."
I would agree with that. On the particular facts of that case Brooke J considered that the Tribunal's decision was justifiable, and he declined to interfere. I think it highly unlikely that the decision of Park J in Kieran Mullin would have been any different if it had been cited to him. His decision was different on its facts. So is mine.
Conclusion