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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 >> Lomas & Ors v HM Revenue and Customs [2016] EWHC 2492 (Ch) (11 October 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/2492.html Cite as: [2017] Bus LR 520, [2016] STI 2782, [2016] WLR(D) 518, [2016] EWHC 2492 (Ch), [2016] BTC 42 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
IN THE MATTER OF LEHMAN BROTHERS INTERNATIONAL (EUROPE)
(IN ADMINISTRATION)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ANTHONY VICTOR LOMAS STEVEN ANTHONY PEARSON PAUL DAVID COPLEY RUSSELL DOWNS JULIAN GUY PARR |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondent |
____________________
David Goy QC and Catherine Addy (instructed by General Counsel and Solicitor to HMRC) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 28 & 29 April 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hildyard :
Nature and rate of statutory interest
"Any surplus remaining after payment of the debts proved shall, before being applied for any purpose, be applied in paying interest on those debts in respect of the periods during which they have been outstanding since the company entered administration."
(1) Rule 2.88(7) is a direction to the administration as to how any surplus "remaining after payment of the debts proved" is to be applied and is to be operated on the assumption that the debts proved have been paid. (See paragraph [134])(2) Interest is not payable in respect of any period after the relevant distribution has been made. (See paragraph [135])
(3) The principle in Bower v Marris is derived from the legal rules as to appropriation of payments towards debts. Those rules apply where there are two (or more) outstanding debts (relevantly one being as to principal and one being as to interest) payable by the debtor to the creditor. (See paragraph [144])
(4) The right to be paid statutory interest out of a surplus under Rule 2.88 is not a right to the payment of interest accruing due from time to time during the period between the commencement of the administration and the payment of the dividend or dividends on the proved debts. (See paragraph [149])
(5) The dividends cannot be appropriated between the proved debts and interest accruing due under Rule 2.88, because at the date of the dividends no interest was payable. [ibid.]
(6) The entitlement under Rule 2.88 to interest is a purely statutory entitlement, arising once there is a surplus after payment of the debts proved and payable only out of that surplus. [ibid.]
(7) The position is very different in relation to interest on contractual debts, judgment debts, or analogous types of interest (e.g. interest on debts in the administration of a deceased's estate), where the interest "accrues due whilst it [i.e. the debt] is outstanding". See paragraphs [109] to [114] and [145].
"The right to interest out of a surplus under rule 2.88 is not a right to the payment of interest accruing due from time to time during the period between the commencement of the administration and the payment of the dividend or dividends on the proved debts. The dividends cannot be appropriated between the proved debts and interest accruing due under rule 2.88, because at the date of the dividends no interest was payable at that time pursuant to rule 2.88. The entitlement under rule 2.88 to interest is a purely statutory entitlement, arising once there is a surplus and payable only out of that surplus. The entitlement under rule 2.88 does not involve any remission to contractual or other rights existing apart from the administration. It is a fundamental feature of rule 2.88, and a primary recommendation of the Cork Committee that all creditors should be entitled to receive interest out of surplus in respect of the periods before payment of dividends on their proved debts, irrespective of whether, apart from the insolvency process, those debts would carry interest."
"Mr Dicker submitted that…[t]he statutory right to interest arising under rule 2.88 can be regarded, with hindsight, as having accrued on a day to day basis since the commencement of the insolvency process, albeit contingently on there being ultimately a surplus. Once the event occurs, the right to interest is treated as having accrued during the relevant period. I do not accept this submission…"
The nature of 'yearly interest'
"(1) This section applies if a payment of yearly interest arising[5] in the United Kingdom is made—
(a) by a company,
(b) by a local authority,
(c) by or on behalf of a partnership of which a company is a member, or
(d) by any person to another person whose usual place of abode is outside the United Kingdom.
(2) The person by or through whom the payment is made must, on making the payment, deduct from it a sum representing income tax on it at the basic rate in force for the tax year in which it is made."
"[T]he essence of interest is that it is a payment which becomes due because the creditor has not had his money at the due date. It may be regarded either as representing the profit he might have made if he had had the use of the money, or conversely the loss he suffered because he had not that use. The general idea is that he is entitled to compensation for the deprivation. From that point of view it would seem immaterial whether the money was due to him under a contract express or implied or a statute or whether the money was due for any other reason in law."
"The whole difficulty is in the expression 'yearly' interest of money; but I think it susceptible of this view, that it is interest reserved, at a given rate per cent, per annum; or, at least, in the construction of this Act, I must hold that any interest which may be or become payable de anno in annum, though accruing de die in diem, is within the 40th section.[10] …
I consider the Act very singularly worded, yearly interest being used apparently in the same sense as annual payments; but I am clearly of opinion that it means at least all interest at a yearly rate, and which may have to be paid de anno in annum; such as interest on purchase-money, as well as mortgage interest; and that, therefore, the purchaser is entitled to deduct the tax in this case."
"We are dealing in this case with short loans only, that is to say, with loans made for a period short of one year, loans which are not intended to be continued, and are not continued, for a long period. The question is whether the interest in such a case, where the interest has to be paid at the expiration of the short period, is yearly interest of money within section 40. It seems to me it is not yearly interest at all; it is not calculated with reference to a year in any sense, although it is true that it is expressed in a notation which is borrowed from the language of cases where there are yearly loans, or where the interest is calculated by the year. It is convenient to express in that notation the amount of interest that has to be paid, but it is not calculated on a year, nor on the supposition that the loans would last for a year, therefore it is not yearly interest. When it runs over, then the interest becomes payable during the times it runs over it, and is calculable with reference to the time it is outstanding, and the case may there be different. If this view is right we are not overruling what was said in Bebb v Bunny. The Vice-Chancellor there expressly confines his judgment to interest at a yearly rate which may have to be paid de anno in annum, such as interest on purchase-money or mortgage interest…"
"…'annual' must be taken to have, like interest on money or an annuity, the quality of being recurrent or being capable of recurrence."
"All that we have is the fact that there was a debt presently due, incurred on account of the expenses, and, if the local authority had chosen to enforce it, presently payable, which debt the local authority under the powers of s. 32 of the local Act did not immediately enforce and have not enforced for a substantial period of time.
…
I do not say that the present case is concluded by the decision in In re Cooper [1911] 2 KB 550, though I think it would be difficult to distinguish it; but applying the principle underlying that decision, I am unable to see how the words 'yearly interest' can apply to this transaction. There is no agreement for a short loan or a long loan. The debt is due and repayment is not enforced; only in that sense is there a loan. Truly speaking there is simply a forbearance to put in suit the remedy for a debt. The repayment might have been enforced at any moment. The debt might have been paid by the debtor at any moment. It carried interest by law, because under s. 32 of the local Act the local authority could and did attach a rate of interest to it. The fact that the rate of interest is calculable at an annual figure is, as was pointed out in Goslings v. Blake 23 QBD 324, immaterial. The debt here was well secured, and the creditor, unlike the creditor in In re Cooper, did not desire immediately to enforce payment of it. The plaintiffs were no doubt to receive interest on it, but not in such a form as would apply to it the words 'any yearly interest of money' in s. 40 of the Income Tax Act, 1853."
"But the natural inference is that a distinction is drawn, with intention, between interest which can be properly described as annual, though it may be paid at shorter terms, and interest which cannot be so described, but is casual or anything from day to day upwards, short of annual. I think that the distinction between the two classes of cases may be somewhat aptly described by the use of a term of the Scots Law. Where the interest is payable in respect of an obligation having 'a tract of future time,' it may, in the sense of the Statute be understood as annual, and where not, not. See opinions of Esher, M.R., and Lindley and Bowen, LL.J. in Goslings & Sharpe v Blake, L.R., 23 Q.B.D., 324." (underlining added)
(1) Since statutory interest does not accrue from day to day and is not payable from year to year, so that there is no period of accrual and no interest is payable unless and until a surplus has been ascertained following payment of the debts proved in full, it does not have the quality of 'yearly interest'.(2) The interest payable is a purely statutory entitlement created by Rule 2.88(7) as to the way in which a surplus is to be distributed; it is not based on any shared intention or accommodation between the parties and there is no underlying transaction akin to a loan or investment such as in the other cases in which the quality of 'yearly interest' has been held to have been satisfied. A statutory scheme of distribution is not an accommodation for the payment of 'yearly interest'.
(3) The right to interest under the statutory scheme is not referable to an obligation having a 'tract of future time'. The right to interest only arises on the ascertainment of a surplus and on the basis that the principal has been repaid: there is no period of time during which a right to interest under Rule 2.88(7) exists and the principal is outstanding on which any such right to interest accrues.
(4) Furthermore, there is no quality or capability of recurrence.
(5) In such circumstances, the statutory right to interest cannot constitute 'yearly interest'.
(6) That conclusion means that there is no need to go on to consider over what period in any given insolvency process the interest would accrue, since no such period of accrual can or does exist. This has the significant advantage (cf HMRC's alternative argument, summarised in paragraphs [35] et seq. below) that the tax treatment of statutory interest will always be certain and be the same for any administration (or, in relation to the equivalent interest provision, any liquidation). It should not depend on how the particular administration is conducted, its complexity, the resources available, or the particular views or expectations of the administrators or the creditors, or require application to the Court. This follows from the structure of the right created in Rule 2.88(7) by Parliament and as correctly identified in Waterfall IIA.
"It has been argued that when the Vice-Chancellor says 'payable de anno in annum' he means to confine his judgment to cases where the interest has to be paid at the end of yearly periods; but he plainly cannot mean that, for interest on purchase money is not payable from year to year, but when the purchase money is paid on actual completion. I think he means interest which may become payable at a future date and is calculable by periods of not less than a year."
(1) In Barlow v CIR 21 TC 354, a trustee acted in breach of trust and to compensate the trust he covenanted by deed in 1930 to pay a principal sum and interest on such sum from 1923, the time of the breach, until the date of the deed. Entitlement to the interest only arose as from the date of the deed. Finlay J held the interest to be yearly interest.(2) In Regal (Hastings) Limited v Gulliver (1944) 24 ATC 297 the directors, having profited from their fiduciary position, were required to account for the profit made and pay interest in respect of the period commencing when the profit accrued in 1935 to the time of payment in 1942. Cassels J considered the interest to be yearly interest. He said at page 299:
"I have to deal with the facts of this case where the House of Lords has held in 1942 that the defendants, the directors, are to be treated as having had, each of them, since 1935, the sums of £1,402 in trust for the plaintiff, and that the directors must be taken to have invested it at the moment they received it and, therefore, must pay interest from that moment to the time 6 ½ years later, when the House of Lords declared the defendants liable. I think these facts distinguish this case from such a case as Gosling and Sharpe v Blake ((1889) 24 Q.B.D. 324) which dealt with bankers' short loans."(3) Thirdly, Mr Goy referred me to Jefford v Gee [1970] 2 QB 130, which concerned the payment of interest in personal injury cases under the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1934. As to the tax treatment of such interest, Lord Denning MR said as follows at 149C-E:
"When the court awards interest on debt or damages for two, three or four years, the interest is subject to tax because it is "yearly interest of money": see Riches v Westminster Bank Ltd [1947] AC 390. Furthermore, seeing that all the interest is received in one year, then, although it may cover two, three or four years' interest, nevertheless, the whole of it comes into charge for tax in the one year in which it is received. This may operate very hardly in those cases where this big sum changes the rate of tax: as for instance, a low taxpayer is brought into a higher rate – or a high taxpayer has to pay much of it away in surtax. But that cannot be helped. The tax man must collect all he can.There are special statutory provisions about deducting tax. For instance, if the person who pays the interest is a company or a local authority, it must deduct tax and make the payment of interest net of tax: see section 26 of the Finance Act 1969. But, if the person paying is an individual, he must pay the interest as a gross sum, leaving the plaintiff to pay the tax. We do not think that the courts, when awarding interest should get involved in such questions. Interest should be computed and awarded as a gross sum payable by a defendant, leaving him to work out whether he should deduct tax or not."
"It was said that the sum in question could not be interest at all because interest implies a recurrence of periodical accretions, whereas this sum came into existence uno flatu by the judgment of the court and was fixed once and for all. But in truth it represented the total of the periodical accretions of interest during the whole time in which payment of the debt was withheld. The sum awarded was the summation of the total of all the recurring interest items."
"Whether or not the present case could have been brought into line with the mortgage cases if it had been shewn by the evidence that the corporation followed a regular practice of investing their funds by allowing time to the frontagers for payment of the principal moneys due from them with interest it is unnecessary to consider. It is sufficient for the purposes of this case to say that no such facts are shewn here."
"Thus interest payable on a mortgage providing for repayment of the money after six months, or indeed a shorter period, will still be annual interest if calculated at a yearly rate, and if the intention of the parties is that it may have to be paid from year to year."
HMRC seek to build on this the submission that even if therefore there was no certainty that the administration would have continued beyond a year and that the relevant debts would be repaid only after a year, the possibility that this might occur would mean that the interest would be 'yearly' interest.
"It is in point of fact a decree amongst a great number of co-partners to settle their equities among themselves, and to wind up the affairs of the partnership, but that does not give the creditors of the partners a judgment against the company, or entitle them to any interest in respect of it."
"The beneficiaries were entitled not merely to the principal, they were entitled to the fruits of it, they were entitled to the interest, and they got interest. I say the beneficiaries because I think it was agreed, and anyhow it seems to me to be clear, that the fact, which is a fact, that there was nobody here in the particular years in question entitled to the income beneficially, is immaterial. It would have been the same if there had been a cestui que trust. I do not think the circumstance that in the facts here the money had not to be paid out to anybody but had to be accumulated makes any difference."
"I have to deal with the facts in this case, where the House of Lords has held in 1942 that the defendants, the directors, are to be treated as having had, each of them, since 1935 the sum of £1,402 in trust for the plaintiff, and that the directors must be taken to have invested it at the moment they received it, and, therefore, must pay interest from that moment to the time, 6½ years later, when the House of Lords declared the defendants liable. I think these facts distinguish this case from such a case as Gosling and Sharpe v Blake…which dealt with bankers' short loans."
(1) The focus of the case was as to how the Courts should apply the (then newly enacted) Administration of Justice Act 1969's provisions for the mandatory award of interest on damages in personal injury cases (see page 142A).(2) There does not appear to have been substantial argument on the question of deduction of tax. It is less surprising, therefore, that the Court of Appeal proceeded on the footing of a misunderstanding (introduced by Counsel) as to the scope and effect of the decision in Riches v Westminster Bank. Lord Denning MR referred in passing, at 149C, to the interest being taxable because it was yearly interest and noted Riches v Westminster Bank. However, Riches v Westminster Bank concerned the mandatory rule that applied to any kind of interest; moreover, leaving aside the deduction rules, any kind of interest would still have been chargeable to tax within Case III of Schedule D.
(3) Furthermore, the Court of Appeal did not decide any issue as to the proper characterisation of the interest: at page 149D–E, Lord Denning refused to become embroiled in this issue, saying:
"There are special statutory provisions about deducting tax. … Interest should be computed and awarded as a gross sum payable by the defendant, leaving him to work out whether he should deduct tax or not."(4) Moreover, the nature of the obligation was a judgment debt. That is not the position in this case; as explained in Waterfall IIA by David Richards J, at paragraphs [109] to [114] and [145], interest on judgment debts is of a different nature, and in particular, as he rightly observed, "Interest on a judgment debt accrues due while it is outstanding just as much as interest under a contract". Thus such interest could be yearly interest but not so the statutory interest created by Rule 2.88.
(5) It should also be noted that the position in relation to judgment debts is not as clear as may have been supposed (cf. In re Cooper referred to at paragraph [31] above, especially at pages 553-4).
(1) First, administrators might come under enormous pressure to admit proofs and pay dividends prior to the first anniversary of an administration.(2) Secondly, creditors' proofs are not dealt with all at the same time. Even in administrations which become distributing administrations and in which creditors have their proved debts paid in full, it is quite possible that some creditors will receive payment of 100p in the £ prior to the first anniversary of an administration, but that others will not. There may be disputed debts which the administrator has provided for in full but which are not admitted prior to the end of the first year of the administration.
(3) Such a realistic possibility begs the question whether the creditors whose debts were admitted and paid prior to the first anniversary of the administration are to receive statutory interest without deduction, but those whose debts are only admitted after the first anniversary of the administration are to have income tax deducted from the statutory interest paid to them.
(4) Such an outcome would be wholly unprincipled and without merit.
(5) It might also result in creditors, in any case where there was the slightest prospect of substantial dividends and, possibly, a surplus resulting, scrambling to have their proofs adjudicated upon, both by the administrator and, potentially, by the Court, within the first 12 months of the administration. It might, for example, lead to applications being made by creditors to lift the statutory stay on proceedings with a view to establishing their claims through Part 7 proceedings if they consider that that would give them an advantage in receiving dividends prior to the end of the first year of the administration.[17]
(1) payable to some creditors but not others in the same administration; and(2) in some administrations but not in others.
(1) It will, in fact, be unclear at the commencement of the vast majority of administrations whether or not the administration will become a distributing administration and, if so, when distributions will be made and in what amount. That was certainly the position in LBIE's administration.(2) There would be a significant problem in evidencing the matter and, in many cases, distributions will end up being made more quickly or less quickly than might have been expected at the beginning of the process (if there was any expectation of distributions at the beginning of the process at all).
(3) It is unclear how there could be any definite answer if it was likely that the debts would be paid in approximately a year's time after commencement.
(4) The question plainly cannot be answered with the benefit of hindsight because that would amount to precisely the same test as HMRC's primary argument, which I have rejected.
Conclusion
1. Pitt's Income Tax Act of 1799 charged "Income from Offices, Pensions, Stipends, Annuities, Interest of Money, Rent Charge, or other Payments of the like Nature, being of certain Annual Amount" under Case 16 of the Schedule.[19] The rules for general deductions from income allowed the deduction of, "The Amount of Annual Interest payable for Debts owing by the Party, or charged upon the Property of the Party, from which any Income shall arise."
2. Pitt's Act was not a success and the yield was poor, and it was repealed in 1802, following the Peace of Amiens.
3. Addington's Income Tax Act of 1803[20] was introduced following the resumption of hostilities in the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. It introduced the principle of deduction of tax at source, as well as the Schedular system that underpinned income tax for two hundred years. Interest of money was not one of the Scheduled sources of income[21]; however, "Annuities, yearly Interest of Money, or other annual Payments … whether the same shall be received and payable half-yearly, or at any shorter or more distant Periods" were expressly charged by s 208 of the 1803 Act.[22]
4. The 1803 Act also provided that in computing profits and gains under Case I of Schedule D, "no Deduction shall be made on account of any annual Interest, or any Annuity, Allowance or Stipend, payable out of such Profits or Gains, except the Interest of Debts due to Foreigners not resident in Great Britain". However, where yearly interest was paid out of profits or gains charged to tax, s 208 authorised the payer to deduct an amount equal to the tax chargeable on the interest. The payer would then be able to retain this, and the tax on the yearly interest would be treated as discharged. This deduction at source mechanism was efficient since the Exchequer would effectively get its tax by denying the payer the right to deduct yearly interest paid out of taxed income in computing its profits or gains; it was left up to the payer to recoup this by making and retaining a deduction from the interest payment.
5. Thus at inception the deduction of tax at source in respect of interest only applied to yearly interest. Non-yearly interest was not generally charged to tax.
6. The Income Tax Act of 1805[23] substituted a new Schedule D of which Case III charged "Profits of an uncertain annual Value", the second item of which was "The Profits on all exchequer bills, and other securities bearing interest payable out of the publick revenue, and on all discounts, and on all interest of money not being annual Interest, payable or paid by any persons whatever, shall be charged according to the preceding rule in this case." Under the 1805 Act, all interest was clearly chargeable, but there continued to be a distinction between yearly interest that was charged by s 192 of the 1805 Act—which, if paid out of profits or gains, was deductible at source—and non-yearly interest to which no deduction of tax at source applied. The deduction provision therefore, at inception, was only intended to apply to recurring (yearly) interest.[24]
7. The legislation was consolidated in the Income Tax Act of 1806 (see s 114 and Schedule D in that Act).[25]
8. Income tax was abolished in 1816, but reintroduced by Sir Robert Peel in 1842. Following the scheme of the 1803–6 Acts, s 102 of the Income Tax Act 1842 charged "Annuities, yearly Interest of Money, or other annual Payments", and provided for deduction at source where paid out of taxed profits or gains. Non-yearly interest was again only chargeable directly under Case III of Schedule D.
9. Gladstone's Income Tax Act 1853 supplemented the 1842 Act, and deduction at source in relation to yearly interest was continued in Gladstone's Income Tax Act 1853, s 40, and where there was deduction at source this was to be determined by the rate at the time the interest became due. The 1853 Act also brought "all Interest of Money, Annuities, and other annual Profits and Gains" directly within the express charging provisions of Schedule D.
10. Subsequently—where deduction at source applied—the determination of the rate was altered by s 15 of the Revenue (No. 1) Act 1864, which specified, "That the Persons liable to and making any such Payment as aforesaid shall be entitled and are hereby authorized to deduct and retain thereout the Amount of the Rate or a proportionate Amount of the several Rates of Income Tax which were chargeable by Law upon or in respect of such Rent, Interest, Annuity, or other annual Payment, or the Source thereof, during the Period through which the same was accruing due, anything in the said recited Act to the contrary notwithstanding." Thus, as a result, the tax rate was to be determined by reference to averaging the tax rates over the period of accruer, rather than simply taking the tax rate at the time the interest became due.
11. The position essentially continued until it was altered by s 24(3) of the Customs and Inland Revenue Act 1888, which made it compulsory to deduct tax at source where interest (of any kind) was not wholly paid out of taxed income. The amount to be deducted was based on the tax rate at the time of payment.
12. However, in the case of yearly interest that was wholly paid out of taxed income, the payer continued to be entitled (but not compelled) to deduct and retain an amount equal to the tax (in recognition of the fact that yearly interest was not deductible in computing taxable profits or gains); this continued to be based on the tax rates over the period of accruer.[26]
13. The legislation was consolidated in the Income Tax Act 1918, which preserved this dichotomy.[27] Rule 21 of the General Rules Applicable to all Schedules of the Income Tax Act 1918 provided for the mandatory deduction of tax at source where interest (of any kind) was not wholly paid out of taxed income (and for the rendering of an account and payment to the Revenue); whereas rule 19 permitted the deduction (and retention) of tax at source where yearly interest was paid out of wholly taxed income.
14. The position was preserved in the Income Tax Act 1952: s 169 (concerning yearly interest and other annual payments paid out of profits or gains wholly charged to tax) corresponds to r 19 of the General Rules in the 1918 Act; and s 170 (concerning interest of any kind that was not paid out of wholly taxed income) corresponds to the former r 21.
15. The Finance Act 1965 created Corporation tax. Section 48(5) disapplied the permissive rule in s 169 of the 1952 Act, in the case of payments made by UK companies, by treating the payments as not made out of profits or gains charged to income tax. Consequently, the mandatory deduction rule in s 170 of the 1952 Act would then apply. Section 52 also introduced the concept of "charges on income", which included payments of yearly interest (and other annual payments); these were allowable as deductions against total profits.
16. The present deduction regime results from the changes made by the Finance Act 1969. Section 18(1) excluded yearly interest from the annual payments in relation to which s 169 of the 1952 Act permitted deduction at source (and, correspondingly, s 18(4) removed the prohibition on deducting annual interest in computing profits or gains). Section 26(3) FA 1969 excluded interest (of any kind) from the payments in relation to which s 170 required deduction at source; whilst s 26(1) (and (4)) FA 1969 created an obligation to deduct at source (and account to the Revenue) in the case of yearly interest paid by companies (as well as certain other categories of payers), or paid by any person to someone whose usual place of abode is outside the UK.[28]
17. Section 26 FA 1969 (the obligation to deduct at source where yearly interest was paid) was re-enacted as s 54 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1970, and then as s 349(2) and (3) ICTA 1988. This became s 874 ITA 2007 and, as part of the Tax Law Re-Write's modernisation of language, the words "of money" were dropped, and the simple word "arising" used throughout instead of the former general Schedule D charging provisions "arising or accruing".
Note 1 It should be recorded that the Third Applicant, Paul David Copley, was one of the Joint Administrators when the application was issued, but resigned as such on 24 June 2016. References to “Joint Administrators” should be construed accordingly. [Back] Note 2 See, for example, HMRC Guidance Statement INS7433 – Dividends: Insolvency (statutory) interest (though that has been withdrawn now). See also paragraphs 80 et seq below [Back] Note 3 Rule 2.88 was amended by the provisions of SI 2010/686, subject to transitional provisions which provided that such amendments only apply where the relevant company entered administration on or after 6 April 2010. [Back] Note 4 Lomas & Ors v Burlington Loan Management Ltd & Ors [2015] EWHC 2269, [2016] Bus LR 17. [Back] Note 5 The statutory charge in respect of interest was found in Case III of Schedule D, and Schedule D generally applied to“annual profits or gains arising or accruing”. The words “or accruing” were omitted in consequence of the Tax Law Re-Write’s modernisation of language. [Back] Note 6 See IRC v Frere [1965] AC 402, at 419F–G, per Lord Radcliffe; and, for example, the side-note of s102 of the Income Tax Act 1842, which refers to‘annual interest’, whilst the section itself refers to ‘yearly interest’ (likewise see s 349 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act (“ICTA”) 1988, and s 54 ICTA 1970, and the original provision in s 208 of the 1803 Act). [Back] Note 7 Prior to 1969 there were two mutually exclusive deduction at source provisions that could potentially apply to interest. First, a “permissive rule”, which - like s 874 ITA 2007 - applied toyearly interest, and which authorised the payer to make a deduction, if the payment was made wholly out of profits or gains charged to tax. It is this rule that can be traced back to 1803. Secondly, there was a “mandatory rule” which required that a deduction if interest (of any kind) was not wholly paid out of profits or gains charged to tax. [Back] Note 8 This summary is derived from an Appendix attached to the Joint Administrators’ skeleton argument; but I have made minor amendments and deletions to take out controversial aspects or matters of argument. [Back] Note 9 cf. Goslings and Sharpe v Blake (1889) 23 QBD 324, at pages 330 to 331, per Lindley and Bowen LJJ. [Back] Note 10 Section 40 of the Income Tax Act 1853. [Back] Note 11 Reference was also made to Re Craven’s Mortgage [1907] 2 Ch 448. [Back] Note 12 InJefford v Gee, the relevant yearly interest was awarded by the Court pursuant to a discretionary jurisdiction; namely section 3 of the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1934. That provision is referred to in the catch-words of the report inRegal (Hastings), but the Joint Administrators submitted that such reference is erroneous and that properly understood the interest was awarded pursuant to the Court’s equitable jurisdiction. As to the basis of the decision, see further below, especially at paragraphs 66 to 68, and footnote 16. [Back] Note 13 Also quoted by David Richards J in Waterfall IIA at paragraph [113]. [Back] Note 14 Finlay J referred to and relied on Vyse v Foster (1872) 8 Ch App 309 (which was affirmed in the House of Lords), and quoted a passage in the judgment of James LJ in the Court of Appeal (at page 329) as follows:
“If an executor commits a breach of trust, he and all those who are accomplices with him in that breach of trust are all and each of them bound to make good the trust fund and interest. If an executor or trustee makes profit by an improper dealing with the assets of the trust fund, that profit he must give up to the trust. If that improper dealing consists in embarking or investing the trust fund in business, he must account for the profit made by him in such employment in such business; or at the option of the cestui que trust, or if it does not appear, or cannot be made to appear, what profits are attributable to such employment, he must account for trade interest, that is to say, interest at 5 per cent. in this case…” [Back] Note 15 [1967] 2 AC 134. [Back] Note 16 I agree, therefore, with the Joint Administrators’ submission that in requiring the payment of interest the House of Lords was exercising its equitable jurisdiction (see footnote 12 above). [Back] Note 17 The same points arise equally in relation to statutory interest payable out of a surplus arising in a liquidation, pursuant to section 189(2) of the Insolvency Act 1986. [Back] Note 18 The various reliefs and exclusions from the deduction rules that have existed from time to time are not traced here. All underlining has been added for emphasis. [Back] Note 19 (1799) 39 Geo 3 c 13, with the Schedule retrospectively substituted by 39 Geo 3 c 22. The superseded Schedule did not include the words “being of certain Annual Amount”. Case 9 of Pitt’s Triple Assessment, enacted as (1798) 38 Geo 3 c 16, was similar. [Back] Note 20 (1803) 43 Geo 3 c 122. [Back] Note 21 It is likely that Addington was influenced in this regard by Adam Smith’sWealth of Nations, Book V, Part II, in which it was doubted that interest of money was a proper subject for direct taxation because of the intrusive “inquisition into every man’s private circumstances” that would be required, and the risk of capital flight. [Back] Note 22 It is also clear from the wording of the provision—which goes on to refer to “such annual Payment”—that yearly interest is regarded as a type of annual payment. [Back] Note 23 (1805) 45 Geo 3 c 49. [Back] Note 24 i.e., as stated by s 192, “where any payment shall be made from profits or gains not charged by this act, or where any interest of money shall not be reserved, or charged or payable for the period of one year” the tax was charged directly; otherwise deduction at source was used (emphasis added). [Back] Note 25 (1806) 46 Geo 3 c 65. [Back] Note 26 Subsequently, FA 1927, s 39 changed this back to the rate at the time the amount payable became due. However, this was obviously still different in general from the rate at the date of payment, which continued to be used for the mandatory deduction rule that applied to interest (of any kind) not wholly paid out of profits or gains charged to tax. [Back] Note 27 However, whilst s 24(3) of the 1888 Act referred to“any interest of money or annuities”; r 21 in the 1918 Act referred to“interest of money, annuity, or other annual payment”. [Back] Note 28 Thus, whereas mandatory deduction had previously been capable of applying to all kinds of interest—as had been confirmed in Lord Advocate v City of Edinburgh (1903) 4 TC 627—the new obligation was limited to yearly interest only; cf. the criticisms made of the Edinburgh decision by Lord Radcliffe in IRC v Frere [1965] AC 402, at 427. [Back]