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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 >> Oxfam v Revenue and Customs [2009] EWHC 3078 (Ch) (27 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/3078.html Cite as: [2010] BVC 108, [2010] STI 556, [2010] STC 686, [2009] EWHC 3078 (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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Oxfam |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs |
Respondents |
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Ms Sarah Moore (instructed by Solicitor's Office of HMRC) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 14/10/09-15/10/09
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Sales :
Introduction
Oxfam's Activities
The Legal Framework
"In so far as the goods and services are used for the purposes of his taxable transactions, the taxable person shall be entitled to deduct from the tax which he is liable to pay: (a) value added tax due or paid in respect of goods or services supplied or to be supplied to him by another taxable person …".
"(5) Where goods or services supplied to a taxable person, goods acquired by a taxable person from another member State or goods imported by a taxable person from a place outside the member States are used or to be used partly for the purposes of a business carried on or to be carried on by him and partly for other purposes, VAT on supplies, acquisitions and importations shall be apportioned so that only so much as is referable to his business purposes is counted as his input tax."
"Guidance VI-6 Business/Non-business
5. Apportionment of tax
5.1 Important
This section gives guidance on cases where a trader incurs tax on goods or services that they intend to use for both business activities and non-business activities such as charitable activities. …
5.3 Section 24(5) Apportionment – General
It is implicit in Section 24 of the Value Added Tax Act that traders should directly attribute as much tax as possible to business and non-business activities. This should always be done. A business/non-business apportionment should not be seen as an alternative to direct attribution.
Yet it is probable that following a direct attribution there will still be a block of expenditure, which cannot be directly attributed to either category. This non-attributable expenditure must be apportioned.
Under VATA Section 24(5) the trader is required to apportion tax so that only tax, which relates to their business purposes, is treated as input tax. …
5.4 Methods of apportionment
The law does not specify any particular method by which traders must apportion tax incurred. Any method of doing so may be used provided that it results in a fair and reasonable apportionment of the tax bearing in mind the trader's various activities and the purposes for which the expenditure is incurred.
5.5. Judging if a result is fair or reasonable
VATA 24(5) states that the trader should apportion tax to reflect their business and non-business purposes. Unfortunately defining what a trader's purpose is for an item of expenditure is inherently a subjective question and one on which different people will take different views. Therefore in practice there is likely to be a range of acceptable apportionment figures that can be justified. Officers should only challenge an apportionment if it is completely outside what they perceive to be this range.
It may be that a single apportionment of all overhead tax does not achieve a "fair and reasonable" result and that a range of apportionments of different items of overhead expenditure may be required. …
If an officer is satisfied that the method is soundly based then approval should be given. However it is important to inform the trader that the method is approved on the basis of the current level of business and non-business activities. If these activities change substantially, the method may no longer give an accurate apportionment. The traders should be required to keep the method under review and to notify Customs if there are significant changes in the nature or level of business/non-business activities.
When agreeing methods – especially complex ones – it is important that officers send a letter to the trader indicating the basis on which they accept the method. For example, if it is based on income it will be because in the trader's current circumstances income provides an accurate indicator of non-business activity. It should be made clear that the method will need to change if this is no longer the case. Also if the method is complex, officers should ensure that they record their understanding of what the various terms and categories used within the method actually mean. Over time both Customs' staff and the trader's representative who agreed the method are liable to change and it is important their successors have an understanding of how it was envisaged that the method would work.
Any agreement on apportionment is to be noted on the Form VAT 465A. On subsequent control visits officers should check that the agreed method has been properly applied and that it still represents a fair and reasonable reflection of the business and non-business use of the relevant supplies.
In order to prevent distortion a method for traders with regular non-business activity should incorporate an annual adjustment calculation.
5.10 Retrospective changes of method
If a trader requests a retrospective change of a previously agreed method of apportionment he will need to demonstrate that:
the former method did not produce a fair and reasonable result; and
the proposed method does achieve this objective.
Provided these criteria are satisfied the request may be approved. Similarly, if either of the criteria are not satisfied the request should not be approved. …
5.12 Challenging apportionments
As the law does not mention "methods" it is not possible for officers to challenge a method as such but only the proportion of input tax resulting from its application. If a trader proposes a method that you agree currently gives a fair result but which you believe is likely to give an inaccurate result in the future you cannot challenge the method immediately. Instead you should notify the trader of your concerns and in the future challenge the misleading result.
If you find that you disagree with the proportion of tax treated as input tax by a trader, you should initially bring it to the trader's attention and ask them to alter it or justify it. If you still believe it is outside the range of what might be considered fair and reasonable – and then only if the trader refuses to alter it – should you substitute your own judgement and assess the difference between their figures and yours. …"
The Facts
"In November I visited to look at the method used to apportion business/non-business input tax and to calculate the recovery rate for residual input tax under the current agreed partial exemption method.
Firstly we need to agree a method to identify the tax relating to business and non-business activity and its recovery (Section 25(4) of the VAT Act 1994 refers). At present there is no formal agreement between us and this needs to be addressed. …
I would be grateful for your comments and proposal …"
"This letter formalises the existing method by which you calculate how much of the VAT you incur may be treated as input tax. The Commissioners agree to the method used subject to the conditions below
(1) You must use this method to calculate your input tax with effect from 1 May 2000 and you must use it until such time as the Commissioners approve or direct the termination of its use. This approval is given in the context of your current business structure and trading patterns.
Should there be any changes in the structure of the business or any changes in trading patterns to such an extent that the agreed method no longer produces a fair and reasonable calculation of input tax, you should inform this office in writing immediately. …
Please sign and date the duplicate copy of this letter to indicate acceptance of the terms and conditions set out herein and return it to this office."
"18. The Approved Method was agreed by HMRC in their letter to Oxfam of 17 October 2000. The Approved Method proceeded in three stages:
(1) Oxfam shall identify all supplies, acquisitions and imports Oxfam received which were used, or to be used, in whole by Oxfam exclusively in the course or furtherance of Oxfam's business activities [Oxfam's "business expenditure" or "BE"]. The VAT thereon was input tax.
(2) Oxfam shall identify all supplies, acquisitions and imports Oxfam received which were used, or to be used, in whole by Oxfam exclusively in carrying out any activity other than the making of taxable and/or exempt supplies [Oxfam's "non-business expenditure" or "non BE"]. The VAT thereon was not input tax and was not recoverable.
(3) Oxfam shall determine how much of any remaining, non-attributable VAT shall be treated as input tax according to the following formula:
The value (excl VAT) of expenditure incurred exclusively in the course or furtherance of Oxfam's business activities
____________________________________________________
The value (excl VAT) of expenditure incurred exclusively in the course or furtherance of Oxfam's business activities | The value (excl VAT) of expenditure incurred exclusively in the course or furtherance of Oxfam's non-business activities |
19. In short, the formula (the Approved Method Formula) applicable in relation to the residual VAT amounted to:
BE
BE + Non BE
20. The Approved Method Formula was used to produce a ratio expressed as a percentage calculated to the nearest two decimal places. The total residual VAT was multiplied by this percentage figure in order to determine the amount of residual VAT which was input tax.
21. The Approved Method contained the proviso that
"Should there be any changes in the structure of the business or any changes in the trading patterns to such an extent that the agreed method no longer produced a fair and reasonable calculation of input tax, [Oxfam] should inform [HMRC] in writing immediately."
22. There has been no such change in the structure of the business or the trading patterns of Oxfam.
23. The issue in this case arose because of a change in the parties' understanding of the law relating to the VAT status of unrestricted fundraising expenditure.
24. Before the decision of the High Court in Church of England Children's Society v Commissioners of Revenue and Customs [2005] EWHC 1692 (Ch), [2005] STC 1644, it was HMRC's policy that the receipt of voluntary donations by a charity represented non-business income for VAT purposes. As a result:
(1) The income received by a charity from voluntary donations was outside the scope of VAT; and
(2) VAT incurred on the unrestricted fundraising expenditure was not input tax and was therefore wholly irrecoverable.
25. When this approach was applied in relation to the formula of the Approved Method, the result was that the unrestricted fundraising expenditure (which was treated as non-business income) was included in the denominator of the Approved Method Formula. The formula, therefore, produced a smaller percentage figure, restricting the recovery of residual VAT incurred by Oxfam, than if it were not included in the fraction.
26. The parties' understanding of the law has altered as a result of Church of England Children's Society, in which Blackburne J held, following the decision of the ECJ in Kretztechnik AG v Finanzamt Linz (Case C-465/03) that ([2005] STC 1644 at paragraphs [28]-[29]):
(1) Receipt of unrestricted voluntary donations was not a supply for VAT purposes and the income was therefore outside the scope of VAT.
(2) However, since the unrestricted voluntary income from donations was, by its nature, available to fund all the Society's activities, some of which were business activities for VAT purposes, the VAT incurred on unrestricted fundraising expenditure was recoverable by the Society in part.
27. HMRC declined to appeal the decision in Church of England Children's Society, setting out its understanding of the law and its policy following that decision in Business Brief 19/05 in which it noted that:
"[W]here a charity which has non-business and business activities incurs VAT on fundraising costs and the funds raised support various activities of the charity, the VAT incurred can only be recoverable input tax to the extent that the funds raised will support taxable business supplies. In practice this means that the VAT incurred on fundraising costs must first be subject to an initial business/non-business apportionment to determine how much of the VAT incurred may be treated as input tax. Then, in circumstances where the charity has exempt business activities, this input tax is further subject to the partial exemption rules.
In some cases, a charity's existing business/non-business apportionment method and partial exemption method will produce a fair and reasonable basis by which input tax can be recovered. However, where this is not the case, HMRC will consider proposals for alternative methods. If exceptional circumstances exist, HMRC may allow alternative methods to be applied retrospectively, provided that it is fair and reasonable for the charity as a whole."
28. HMRC further stated that
Making claims for repayment of Tax
"Charities that wish to make claims for input tax may do so by making a voluntary disclosure to their local VAT office in accordance with guidance in Notice 700/45 How to correct VAT errors and make adjustments or claims, subject to the time limit in Regulation 29(1A) of the VAT Regulations 1995. This restricts late claims for input tax to three years from the due date of the return for the prescribed accounting period in which the input tax was chargeable."
29. Oxfam made a claim under Regulation 29 VAT Regulations 1995 (hereinafter referred to as the 1995 Regulations) by letter dated 17 March 2006 retrospectively to reclaim VAT incurred on the fees of professional fundraisers in generating voluntary charitable donations (the Claim).
30. For the purposes of the Claim, Oxfam used the Approved Method and proceeded on the basis of its understanding of the decision in Church of England Children's Society. This was that the unrestricted fundraising expenditure was neither expenditure incurred exclusively in the furtherance of the Appellant's business activities, nor expenditure incurred exclusively in the furtherance of its non-business activities. In other words, it was neither business nor non-business expenditure. For this reason, in the Claim, Oxfam excluded the unrestricted fundraising expenditure from the denominator of the Approved Method Formula. As a result, the Approved Method Formula produced a higher percentage figure and an increased amount of residual VAT incurred by Oxfam was deemed to be input tax and therefore recoverable.
31. In letters dated 16 October 2006, 4 September 2006 and the final decision letter of 10 January 2007, HMRC refused to repay the Claim, on the basis that the Church of England Children's Society had changed the effect of the Approved Method Formula so that it no longer produced a "fair and reasonable" result as regards Oxfam's level of input tax.
32. On 30 May 2006, HMRC withdrew their approval of the Approved Method Formula and advised Oxfam that a revised method needed to be put in place. Oxfam has not yet put forward a revised method which HMRC were able to approve."
"35. The original recovery rate of VAT in respect of the business/non-business apportionment under the Approved Method was in the region of 75 per cent per year. Oxfam's proposed application of the Approved Method following the Church of England Children's Society decision increased the recovery rate to around 85 to 90 per cent. In Mr Higgins' view this did not produce a fair and reasonable rate of recovery, and represented a significant departure from the shared understanding upon which the Approved Method was agreed. Further, Oxfam's proposal meant that it would effectively be recovering VAT on services which were used for its non-business activities. Mr Higgins pointed out that Oxfam's financial statements recorded that its trading activities were profitable. This indicated that the expenditure incurred on professional fund raisers generated income for use in Oxfam's aims of overcoming poverty which was a non-business activity. Oxfam's website stated that for every £1 donated, 79 pence was spent on emergency, development and campaigning work, 11 pence was spent on support and running costs and 10 pence was invested to generate future income.
36. Mr Childs accepted HMRC's evidence of Oxfam's website and its financial statements. Mr Childs, however, considered that the information on the breakdown of every £1 donated was just one way of looking at Oxfam's activities. In reality the funds raised by Oxfam were applied to the totality of its activities, not for selected activities. Further the information on the website did not mention that Oxfam expended considerable resources on the warehousing and export of relief goods which were zero-rated activities for VAT purposes. In any event Oxfam was not putting its case on the basis that the VAT claimed in its voluntary disclosure was attributable to business activities. Oxfam's case was straightforward, namely HMRC were bound by the terms of the approved method."
"Although the facts of the Appeal were largely agreed there were some areas particularly arising from the oral evidence which required determination by the Tribunal. We make the following findings of fact:
(1) Oxfam was deemed for VAT purposes to have income from "non-business" activities and business income which was taxable at the standard and zero-rate, as well as income which was exempt from VAT.
(2) Oxfam operated a method for apportioning VAT between business and non-business activities from May 1995. The Respondents gave formal approval to the method in a letter dated 17 October 2000.
(3) Formal approval was given on the shared understanding of the parties that unrestricted fundraising expenditure should be counted in the value of non-business expenditure, which constituted a denominator in the Approved Method Formula.
(4) The discussions leading to the Approved Method in October 2000 comprised Oxfam justifying its existing method and rejecting HMRC's suggestions to alter it.
(5) Oxfam's business operations were profitable, and Oxfam applied over 80 per cent of donations to the relief of poverty, a non-business activity.
(6) Oxfam adduced no evidence that the unrestricted fundraising expenditure upon which its claim for VAT was based was used for the purposes of its business.
(7) Oxfam's claim would enable it to recover about 85 per cent of the VAT incurred on unrestricted fundraising expenditure.
(8) HMRC applied the Approved Method as understood by the parties in October 2000 to Oxfam's claim resulting in a VAT repayment of over £2 million."
The Decision of the Tribunal
"There is no equivalent legislative framework for methods apportioning residual VAT between business and non-business activities [as the regulations regarding retail schemes which had been considered in that case]. Section 24(5) of the VAT Act 1994 simply states that VAT on supplies, acquisitions, and importations shall be apportioned so that only so much as is referable to his business purposes is counted as his input tax. The legislation is silent on how the taxpayer should discharge his responsibility to apportion VAT to business purposes. The Respondents provide advice to taxpayers about apportioning VAT, which does not have the force of law. The Respondents' internal guidance emphasises that it is the taxpayer's responsibility to choose the most appropriate apportionment method. The Respondents' consent is not required for the method chosen, although they will give their approval if requested and in order to be of assistance to the taxpayer. The guidance permits a retrospective change of a previously approved method by a taxpayer, if it did not produce a fair and reasonable result. The guidance clearly states that it is not open to officers to challenge a method of apportionment. They can only contest the proportion of input tax resulting from the application of the method."
"81. We are satisfied that the discussions and documents associated with the Approved Method when looked at as a whole followed the approach adopted in the Respondents' internal guidance. The letter of 17 October 2000 referred to the Respondents formalising the existing method by which the Appellant counted VAT as input tax. The condition about changes in the structure of the business replicated the recommendation in the guidance. As stated by Mr Higgins, the Respondents' purpose for agreeing to methods was to assist the taxpayer. The guidance was clear that it was not open to the Respondents to challenge the method of apportionment.
82. The evidence of Mr Childs about the events in 2000 portrayed a picture of the Appellant justifying its existing method to the Respondents not one of the parties negotiating a contract. The Appellant made representations and rejected the Respondents' suggestion to alter their existing method. Mr Childs' description was consistent with the process envisaged in the internal guidance.
83. We find that there was no evidence of intention on the part of the parties to create contractual relations with the Approved Method. There was no meeting of minds. The Appellant continued with its existing method. The Respondents followed the steps laid out in their internal guidance.
84. Our conclusion on the facts is consistent with the legal context for apportionment methods. The legislation does not recognize such methods and places responsibility upon the taxpayer to get it right. The internal guidance stresses that the Respondents have no legal challenge to the method used by the taxpayer. The guidance does not mention the use of care and management powers to secure free-standing agreements on apportionment. Thus on our analysis any purported exercise by the Respondents of care and management powers to enter into contractually binding agreements on an apportionment method would be contrary to their statutory functions and section 24(5) of the VAT Act 1994."
The Appeal against the Tribunal's Decision
Legitimate Expectation
"Where the court considers that a lawful promise or practice has induced a legitimate expectation of a benefit which is substantive, not simply procedural, authority now establishes that … the court will in a proper case decide whether to frustrate the expectation is so unfair that to take a new and different course will amount to an abuse of power. Here, once the legitimacy of the expectation is established, the court will have the task of weighing the requirements of fairness against any overriding interest relied upon for the change of policy."
"… it would be wrong to understate the significance of reliance in this area of the law. It is very much the exception, rather than the rule, that detrimental reliance will not be present when the court finds unfairness in the defeating of a legitimate expectation."
(For the significance of detrimental reliance, see also 1126H-1127D per Peter Gibson LJ, 1131F-G per Laws LJ and 1133F-H per Sedley LJ; R v IRC, ex p. MFK Underwriting Agencies Ltd [1990] 1 WLR 1545, at 1569H per Bingham LJ and R (Bamber) v HMRC [2006] STC 1035; [2005] EWHC 3221 (Admin), [56], [59] and [72]-[73] per Lindsay J).
Jurisdiction of the Tribunal
"(1) … an appeal shall lie to a tribunal with respect to any of the following matters –
…
(c) the amount of any input tax which may be credited to a person;…"
"Assume for the moment that the tribunal has the power to review the commissioners' discretion. It could only properly do so if it were shown the commissioners had acted in a way in which no reasonable panel of commissioners could have acted; if they had taken into account some irrelevant matter or had disregarded something to which they should have given weight. If it had been intended to give a supervisory jurisdiction of that nature to the tribunal one would have expected clear words to that effect in the Act [the Finance Act 1972]. But there are no such words to be found. Section 40(1) sets out nine specific headings under which an appeal may be brought and seems by inference to negative the existence of any general supervisory jurisdiction."
(Section 83 contains more specific headings of jurisdiction, but still does not contain a provision conferring any general supervisory jurisdiction).