BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Brumby (Inspector of Taxes) v Milner [1976] UKHL 7 (27 October 1976) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1976/7.html Cite as: [1976] 1 WLR 1096, [1976] WLR 1096, [1976] UKHL 7, [1976] 3 All ER 636 |
[New search] [Buy ICLR report: [1976] 1 WLR 1096] [Help]
Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/4/3/1277
Die Mercurii, 27° Octobris 1976
Upon Report from the Appellate
Committee, to whom
was referred the Cause Brumby (Inspector of
Taxes)
against Milner, That the Committee had heard Counsel
for
the Appellant, as well on Monday the 4th, as on
Tuesday the 5th,
days of this instant October, upon the
Petition and Appeal of
Samuel Milner of 130 Poolstock,
Wigan in the County of Greater
Manchester, praying,
That the matter of the Order set forth in the
Schedule
thereto, namely, an Order of Her Majesty's Court
of
Appeal of the 3d of October 1975, so far as therein
stated
to be appealed against, might be reviewed before
Her Majesty the
Queen in Her Court of Parliament,
and that the said Order, so far
as aforesaid, might be
reversed, varied or altered, or that the
Petitioner might
have such other relief in the premises as to Her
Majesty
the Queen in Her Court of Parliament, might seem meet;
and
Counsel appearing for the Respondent but not being
called upon ;
and due consideration being had of what
was offered for the said
Appellant :
It is Ordered and Adjudged
by the Lords Spiritual
and Temporal in the Court of Parliament
of Her Majesty
the Queen assembled, That the said Order of
Her
Majesty's Court of Appeal of the 3d day of October
1975. in
part complained of in the said Appeal, be, and
the same is hereby,
Affirmed, and that the said Petition
and Appeal be, and the
same is hereby, dismissed this
House : And it is further Ordered.
That the Appellant
do pay, or cause to be paid, to the said
Respondent the
Costs incurred by him in respect of the said
Appeal,
the amount thereof to be certified by the Clerk of
the
Parliaments.
Brumby (Inspector of Taxes) (Respondent) v. Milner (Appellant).
HOUSE OF LORDS
BRUMBY
(INSPECTOR OF TAXES)
(RESPONDENT)
v.
MILNER (APPELLANT)
Lord
Wilberforce
Lord
Diplock
Lord
Simon of Glaisdale
Lord
Kilbrandon
Lord
Edmund-Davies
Lord Wilberforce
My Lords,
In 1963 William Park & Co.
Forgemasters Ltd. decided to set up a profit-
sharing scheme for
the benefit of its employees. A sum of £700,000 was
provided
on loan to Trustees, who were to use it to purchase shares in
the
Company to be held upon the Trusts of the scheme. These trusts
were
declared in a deed dated 25 September, 1963. Dividends on the
shares were
to be used either to pay off the loan or to make
payments to employees of
the Company and the scheme was so
operated. Some £111,000 was applied
in repayment of the
debt, and £108,000 was distributed to employees,
who
individually received sums from £9-£14 a year
after deduction of tax
Then in 1969 a change took place.
The Company became a subsidiary
of a holding company which also
controlled an allied undertaking, and the
directors had to decide
what to do with the scheme. They decided that it
was impracticable
to continue it, and so they used the power, which they
had under
the Trust Deed, to terminate the scheme by one year's notice.
The
Trustees, then, realised the Trust assets, paid off the balance of
the debt
and, in accordance with the clause in the Trust Deed
which provided for
this situation, they decided to distribute the
balance in proportions fixed by
them between 1,802 employees and
49 pensioners. Mr. Milner, the appellant,
was one of the employees
and he became entitled to £200. When the
Revenue heard about
this they decided to assess him to income tax under
Schedule E.
The test under Schedule E, now set
out in sections 181(1) and 183(1) of
the Income and Corporation
Taxes Act 1970 is whether the sum in question
is an emolument from
the taxpayer's employment. " Emoluments " include
any
perquisite or profit. The only question in this, and in the many
similar
cases which come before the courts relating to such
payments as cricketers'
or footballers' benefits or for Easter
offerings, or housing subsidies, is whether
the emolument can be
said to arise " from " the employment or office. In
some
instances, as the decisions show, this is not an easy question to
answer:
here it is plain.
The taxability of the annual
distributions under the scheme is not an issue
in this appeal but
nobody has suggested, or could suggest that these were
not
taxable. The only question is whether any ground could be found
for
distinguishing the capital payments made on the winding up of
the scheme.
In my opinion, with all respect to the efforts of
learned counsel for the
taxpayer, there is no ground for any such
distinction. I shall not attempt to
demonstrate this by detailed
analysis of the Trust Deed, or by reference to
such authorities as
may, possibly, be relevant, since this has been done to
my
complete satisfaction by the Court of Appeal, affirming Walton J.
To
restate the argument in words of my own, even if this were to
result in a
difference of formulation, would not be productive of
advantage, and I am
more than content fully to adopt the single
judgment of the Court of Appeal
delivered by Lord Russell of
Killowen.
The appeal can only be dismissed.
2
Lord Diplock
My Lords,
I agree.
Lord Simon of Glaisdale
My Lords,
The issue in this appeal has, in
my respectful opinion, been satisfactorily
disposed of in the
unanimous judgment of the Court of Appeal delivered
by my noble
and learned friend, Lord Russell of Killowen. There is,
indeed,
little that can be added.
As the argument developed before
your Lordships, there appeared to be
some danger that the task of
interpretation should be focused, not on the
words of the statute,
but on various judicial glosses of those words. What
Lord
Radcliffe said in Hochstrasser (Inspector of Taxes) v.
Mayes [1960]
A.C. 376, 391, is therefore in point:
" In the past several
explanations have been offered by judges of
" eminence as to
the significance of the word ' from ' in this context. It
"
has been said that the payment must have been made to the employee
"
' as such '. It has been said that it must have been made to him '
in
" ' his capacity of employee '. It has been said that it
is assessable if
" paid ' by way of remuneration for his
services ', and said further that
" this is what is meant by
payment to him ' as such '. These are all
" glosses, and they
are all of value as illustrating the idea which is
"
expressed by the words of the statute. But it is perhaps worth
observ-
" ing that they do not displace those words."
Lord Radcliffe did not include
among the glosses which he thus reviewed
a distinction between "
causa causans " and " causa sine qua non "
; though
this distinction has had some eminent users in this
context, and the concept
was strongly pressed on your Lordships on
behalf of the appellant. It was
said that the causa causans of
the payment was the decision to wind up the
scheme: the
appellant's employment was no more than its causa sine qua
non.
The distinction between a " causa causans "
and a " causa sine qua
" non "
was formerly much used in other branches of the law ; but it
was
found to confuse rather than to illuminate (see Lord Wright in
Smith, Hogg &
Co. Ltd. v. Black Sea and Baltic
General Insurance Co. Ltd. [1940] A.C. 997,
1003, cited by
Megarry J. in Pritchard (Inspector of Taxes) v,
Arundale
[1972] Ch.D. 229, 237, 238) and it has been
generally abandoned. Causation
has been debated by meta-physicians
and logicians throughout the recorded
history of philosophy: the
debate continues, with more sophisticated tools of
analysis than
the terms " causa causans " and " causa
sine qua non ". These
will rarely if ever assist
the law, where they have frequently been used
without definition
or analysis. On the face of it "causa causans" is
a
tautology. " Causa
" sine qua non
" seems to have been used in two senses: first, to
denote a
matter which has had no effect on the situation before
the court, but has
merely provided a setting for a matter which
has had such an effect; and,
secondly, to denote a matter which
has had some effect, but which, other
matters having had a more
potent effect, it is the policy of the law to
disregard. In my
respectful submission these terms are of little assistance
in
solving the problem before your Lordships. But even were I to
think
that the issue before your Lordships could be determined by
outmoded and
ambiguous concepts of causation couched in Latin, I
would not, with all
respect, be prepared to accept the appellant's
categorisation.
A far less question-begging test
was suggested by Lord Radcliffe in
Hochstrasser (Inspector of
Taxes) v. Mayes and by Lord Reid in Laidler v.
Perry
(Inspector of Taxes) [1966] AC 16. The former case was
concerned
with a large employer, many of whose employees
(including the taxpayer)
3
were required by their service
agreements to be prepared to move to new
work locations. Their
moves might well involve the sale of their houses at a
loss. The
employer undertook to make good any such loss. The question
was
whether such compensatory payment was taxable under Schedule E.
Lord
Radcliffe said (p. 392):
" The essential point is that
what was paid to [the taxpayer] was paid
" to him in respect
of his personal situation as a house-owner . . . "
If the payment to the appellant
was not made to him in respect of his
personal situation as an
employee, in what respect was it paid to him?
This question was
not answered.
Lord Reid adopted a complementary
approach in Laidler v. Perry at
p. 30 B/C:
"... we must always return to
the words in the statute and answer
" the question—did
this profit arise from the employment? The answer
" will be '
no ' if it arose from something else ".
It was conceded that payments to
the instant taxpayer from the income of
the Trust Fund arose
relevantly from the appellant's employment. From
what else did the
capital payment arise?
I would dismiss the appeal.
Lord Kilbrandon
My Lords,
In my opinion the disposing of
this appeal does not call for yet another
attempt to substitute
some exegetical phrase for the simple words of sec.
181(1),
namely, emoluments from any office or employment. I prefer to
adopt
the approach taken by Lord Reid in Laidler v. Perry
(Inspector of
Taxes) [1966] AC 16 at p. 30:
" There is a wealth of
authority on this matter and various glosses on
" or
paraphrases of the words in the Act appear in judicial opinions,
"
including speeches in this House. No doubt they were helpful in the
"
circumstances of the cases in which they were used, but in the end
"
we must always return to the words in the statute and answer the
"
question—did this profit arise from the employment? The answer
will
" be ' no ' if it arose from something else."
Taking that approach, I find
myself in entire agreement with the conclusion
arrived at by the
Court of Appeal, and there is little more that need be said.
It is conceded that the income
payments made from the trust fund to
employees arose from their
several employments and were properly taxable in
their hands. It
was therefore necessary for the appellant to show that, by
contrast,
the payment out of capital, to use Lord Reid's words, " arose
from
" something else ". It was submitted that the
payment arose not from the
appellant's employment but from the
company's reluctant decision to wind
up the profit-sharing scheme.
I cannot agree with that. Certainly the money
forming the payment
became available in consequence of certain events and
decisions
connected with the structure of the company. But the sole reason
for
making the payment to the appellant was that he was an employee,
and
the payment arose from his employment. It arose from nothing
else, as it
would have done if, for example, it had been made to
an employee for some
compassionate reason. In such a case, as Lord
Reid pointed out in Laidler
v Perry (supra) at pp.
31 to 32, " the gift is not made merely because the
"
donee is an employee ". There would be another reason personal
to the
recipient, namely his distress. There is no such other
reason here.
I would accordingly dismiss this appeal.
4
Lord Edmund-Davies
My Lords,
I respectfully concur with the
judgment of my noble and learned friend on
the Woolsack and would
accordingly dismiss this appeal.
304085 Dd 896296 200 10/76 St.S