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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 >> Augean Plc v HM Revenue & Customs [2008] EWHC 2026 (Ch) (15 August 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/2026.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 2026 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE VAT AND DUTIES TRIBUNAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
AUGEAN PLC |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS OF HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
____________________
James Puzey (instructed by The Solicitors to HM Revenue and Customs) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 11 August 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Hon Mr Justice David Richards:
"(1) Subject to subsection (2) below, the Commissioners shall issue a certificate in relation to any land where–
(a) an application in writing is made by a person carrying out, or intending to carry out, reclamation of that land (the applicant);
(b) the applicant provides to them such information as they may direct, whether generally or as regards that particular case;
(c) the application is made not less than 30 days before the date from which the certificate is to take effect; and
(d) the reclamation qualifies under subsection (7) below.
(2) The Commissioners shall not refuse an application for a certificate in a case where the conditions specified in subsection (1) (a) to (d) above are satisfied unless it appears to them–
(a) necessary to do so for the protection of the revenue; or
(b) except where the applicant is one of the bodies mentioned in subsection (5) of section 43A above, that all or part of the reclamation of land to which the application relates is required in order to comply with a notice or order mentioned in subsection (4) of that section.
(3) The Commissioners may make a certificate subject to such conditions set out in the certificate as they think fit, including (but not restricted to) conditions–
(a) that the certificate is to be in force only in relation to a particular quantity of material;
(b) that the certificate is to be in force only in relation to disposals made at a particular landfill site or sites;
(c) that the certificate is to be in force in relation to part only of the land to which the application relates.
(4) A certificate issued under this section–
(a) shall have effect from the date it is issued to the applicant or such later date as the Commissioners may specify in the certificate; and
(b) shall cease to have effect on such date as the Commissioners may set out in the certificate, but in any event no later than the day on which the person to whom the certificate was issued ceases to have the intention to carry out any activity involving reclamation of the land in relation to which the certificate was issued.
(5) Where a certificate has been issued to a person, the Commissioners–
(a) may vary it by issuing a further certificate to that person; or
(b) may withdraw it by giving notice in writing to that person; but this is subject to subsection (6) below.
(6) The Commissioners shall not withdraw a certificate unless it appears to them–
(a) necessary to do so for the protection of the revenue;
(b) that the reclamation did not in fact qualify under subsection (7) below or no longer so qualifies;
(c) that there will not by any or any more disposals within section 42A (2) above of material from the land to which the certificate relates; or
(d) except where the person to whom the certificate was issued is one of the bodies mentioned in subsection (5) of section 43A above, that the removal of material from the land to which the certificate relates is required in order to comply with a notice or order mentioned in subsection (4) of that section.
(7) A reclamation qualifies under this subsection if–
(a) it is, or is to be, carried out with the object of facilitating development, conservation, the provision of a public park or other amenity, or the use of the land for agriculture or forestry; or
(b) in a case other than one within paragraph (a) above, it is, or is to be, carried out with the object of reducing or removing the potential of pollutants to cause harm,
and, in either case, the conditions specified in subsection (8) below are satisfied.
(8) The conditions mentioned in subsection (7) above are–
(a) that the reclamation constitutes or includes clearing the land of pollutants which are causing harm or have the potential for causing harm;
(b) that, in a case within subsection (7)(a) above, those pollutants would (unless cleared) prevent the object concerned being fulfilled; and
(c) that all relevant activities have ceased or have ceased to give rise to any pollutants in relation to that land.
(9) For the purposes of subsection (8) above the clearing of pollutants–
(a) need not be such that all pollutants are removed;
(b) need not be such that pollutants are removed from every part of the land in which they are present;
(c) may involve their being cleared from one part of the land and disposed of on another part of the same land.
(10) For the purposes of subsection (8)(c) above an activity is relevant if–
(a) it has at any time resulted in the presence of pollutants in, on or under the land in question otherwise than–
(i) without the consent of the person who was the occupier of the land at the time, or
(ii) by allowing pollutants to be carried onto the land by air or water, and
(b) at that time it was carried out–
(i) by the applicant or a person connected with him, or
(ii) by any person on the land in question.
(11) For the purposes of subsection (10) above–
(a) any question whether a person is connected with another shall be determined in accordance with section 839 of the Taxes Act 1988;
(b) the occupier of land that is not in fact occupied is the person entitled to occupy it.
(12) In this section "land" has the meaning given by section 43A(6) above."
"36. Subject to the success of the present appeal, Augean intends to include in its planning application a proposal to remove the contaminating materials in the Site. It has not yet identified a site to receive the materials intended to be so removed. Subject to the granting of planning permission and a PPC permit, Augean intends to remove the contaminating material in the Site while contemporaneously filling Phase 4 and excavating Phase 7. After the material is removed and Phase 4 filled, Augean further intends fully to engineer the Site to develop a modern containment landfill for the disposal of wastes from the construction industry that are difficult to manage. Such wastes compromise asbestos, gypsum and contaminated soils together with a complementary limited quantity of non-hazardous waste."
The replacement waste material was described in the evidence as "hazardous material with a low leaching potential".
"73. It appears to me naturally to follow that the "relevant activity" for the purposes of section 43B(8)(c) is not "the former and concluded landfilling of waste at the Site" as submitted by Mr Sheridan, but rather the continuing one of the disposal of waste by landfill.
74. I do, however, accept his claim that no further waste is permitted to be deposited at the Site since one of the specified steps in the closure notice is that from the date thereof, 28 February 2007, Augean "cease accepting and do not recommence the acceptance of waste for disposal at the landfill". That does not affect my definition of "relevant activity" for ceasing to accept waste may be a temporary phenomenon since by regulation 16(3) of the Landfill Regulations the Environment Agency may withdraw the closure notice at any time.
75. I am also unable to accept Mr Sheridan's submission that the "relevant activity" has ceased. If I were to do so, it would mean that any landfill site operator could simply close down its operation and thereafter, at a time of his own choosing, claim that there was no landfilling being conducted on its site. As I have already explained, under the planning permission, Augean is required to carry out certain work on the Site with a view its being restored to defined contours and to agricultural use, and under the WML is required to prevent leachate migration and also to take remedial steps to prevent further leachate escapes until prevention can be achieved. In other words, there is a present and continuing liability on Augean to deal with the leachate problems under the WML."
"76. Section 43B(8)(c) of the 1996 Act requires all "relevant activities" to "have ceased or have ceased to give rise to any pollutants in relation to that land". It is now, although it was not earlier, common ground that "that land" is the Site. As I have decided, "relevant activities" in the present case means the landfilling of wastes at the Site. In doing so, I have taken careful account of section 43B(10) and am quite satisfied that the deposit of waste at the Site has resulted in the presence of pollutants in or under the Site. I earlier found that deposits of waste at the Site ceased on service of the closure notice so that the only remaining question is whether the deposits of waste at the Site have ceased to give rise to any pollutants in relation to it. It is patently obvious from the evidence, and I find, that the deposits made continue to give rise to pollutants in relation to the Site."
"pollution" means emissions as a result of human activity which may be harmful to human health or the quality of the environment, cause offence to any human senses, result in damage to material property, or impair or interfere with amenities and other legitimate uses of the environment; and "pollutant" means any substance, vibration, heat or noise released as a result of such an emission which may have such an effect."
"Emission" is defined in reg 2(1) in four different ways, depending on whether it applies to Part A or Part B installations or mobile plants, but in each case it involves a release of substances from sources in the installation or plant into the air, water or land.
"pollution of the environment due to the release (into any environmental medium) from any process of substances which are capable of causing harm to man or any other living organisms supported by the environment."
In my judgment, a definition of one phrase or concept (pollution of the environment) for the purposes of one statute cannot be a sure guide to the meaning of a different word (pollutant) in a different statute.
"Landfill tax was introduced as from 1 October 1996 by the Finance Act 1996 (the 1996 Act). The tax is a creature of domestic statute in that it is not a tax required under any provisions of Community law. However the United Kingdom does have obligations in Community law to take appropriate steps to encourage the prevention, recycling and processing of waste under EC Council Directive 75/442 of 15 July 1975 on waste (OJ :194 25.07.75 p 39). The Environmental Protection Act 1990 is the key piece of domestic legislation enacted to meet this obligation. Landfill tax can therefore be seen as a separate domestic initiative aimed at protecting the environment and securing the ambitions of the directive."
"Acts are said to be in pari materia if they are (1) Acts which have been given a collective title; or (2) Acts as to which it is stated in the latest of the Acts that they are to be construed as one; or (3) Acts having short titles that (apart from the calendar year) are identical; or (4) other Acts which deal with the same subject matter on the same lines. Acts in pari material 'are to be taken together as forming one system, and as interpreting and enforcing each other'."
I do not consider that it would be right to treat a taxing statute, albeit one with the purposes identified earlier in this judgment, as being in pari materia with a wide range of pollution control legislation. They are not statutes which deal with the same subject matter on the same lines. The Finance Act 1996 is not concerned with the means by which polluting activities are controlled and regulated, and the definitions to which Mr Sheridan has referred are adopted in that context. Vol 44(1) Halsburys Laws addresses the position where statutes are not in pari materia at para 1485:
"Comparison between Acts not in pari materia or the decisions on them affords no reliable guide to their construction, since the same words used in different statutory codes may have different meanings in each code, according to the intentions of the Acts and the mischief they are designed to prevent. This does not mean, however, that assistance may not be derived from contrasting the language used in different Acts dealing with the same topic."