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United Kingdom Special Commissioners of Income Tax Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Special Commissioners of Income Tax Decisions >> Anise Ltd & Ors v HM Inspector of Taxes [2003] UKSC SPC00364 (24 March 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSPC/2003/SPC00364.html Cite as: [2003] UKSC SPC364, [2003] UKSC SPC00364 |
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Anise Ltd & Ors v HM Inspector of Taxes [2003] UKSC SPC00364 (24 March 2003)
SCHEDULE D – Trading profits – Moneys mistakenly paid to trader – Appellants supplied
advertising facilities to customers – Customers mistakenly paid more than invoiced amounts – overpaid amounts accounted for by appellants as "creditors" but after two years transferred to profit and loss account as exceptional items – whether overpayments constitute trading receipts accruing or arising from trade for tax purposes - No
THE SPECIAL COMMISSIONERS
ANISE LIMITED
BASIL LIMITED
CHIVE LIMITED
DILL LIMITED Appellants
- and -
STUART HAMMOND (HM INSPECTOR OF TAXES) Respondent
Special Commissioners: STEPHEN OLIVER QC
DR DAVID WILLIAMS
Sitting in London on 11 February 2003
Hugh McKay, counsel, instructed by Turner and Brown, chartered accountants for the appellants
Ian Jarman, HM Inspector of Taxes, for the Respondent
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2003
ANONYMIZED DECISION
The facts
The relevant legislation
(1) Tax under this Schedule shall be charged in respect of –
(a) the annual profits or gains arising or accruing –
(i) to any person residing in the United Kingdom from any kind of property whatever, whether situated in the United Kingdom or elsewhere, and
(ii) to any person residing in the united Kingdom from any trade, profession or vocation, whether carried on in the United Kingdom or elsewhere …
(2) Tax under Schedule D shall be charged under the Cases set out in subsection (3) below, and subject to and in accordance with the provisions of the Tax Acts applicable to those Cases respectively.
(3) The Cases are –
Case I - tax in respect of any trade carried on in the United Kingdom or elsewhere …
(1) Except as otherwise provided by the Tax Acts, the amount of any income shall for purposes of corporation tax be computed in accordance with income tax principles, all questions as to the amounts which are or are not to be taken into account as income, or in computing income, or charged to tax as a person's income, or as to the time when any such amount is to be treated as arising, being determined in accordance with income tax law and practice as if accounting periods were years of assessment.
…
(3) Accordingly, for purposes of corporation tax, income shall be computed, and the assessment shall be made, under the like Schedules and Cases as apply for the purpose of income tax …
Were the overpayments trading receipts?
Morley v Tattersalls
"Mr Hills' argument was to the effect that, although they were not trading receipts at the moment of receipt, they had at that moment the potentiality of becoming trading receipts. That proposition involves a view of income tax law in which I can discover no merit except that of novelty. I invited Mr Hills to point to any authority which in any way supported the proposition that a receipt which at the time of its receipt was not a trading receipts could by some subsequent operation ex post facto be turned into a trading receipt, not, be it observed, as at the date of receipt, but as at the date of the subsequent operation. It seems to me, with all respect to that argument, that it is based on a complete misapprehension of what is meant by a trading receipt in income tax law. No case has been cited to us in which anything like that proposition appears. It seems to me that the quality and nature of receipt for income tax purposes is fixed once and for all when it is received. What the partners did in this case, as I have said, was to decide among themselves that what they had previously regarded as a liability of the firm they would not, for practical reasons, regard as a liability; but that does not mean that at that moment they received something, nor does it mean that at that moment they imprinted upon some existing asset a quality different from what it had possessed before. There was no existing asset at all at that time. All they did, as I have already pointed out, was to write down a liability item in their balance sheet, and how in the world by effecting that operation you can be said to have converted a sum received years ago into something which it never was is a thing which, with all respect, passes my comprehension."
His Lordship went on to dismiss as irrelevant the one authority cited by Mr Hills to support his argument.
Jays – The Jewellers v Commissioners of Inland Revenue
The submissions of the Inspector
The nature of the overpayments
Stephen Oliver
David Williams
SPECIAL COMMISSIONERS
Cases cited but not referred to in the decision
Murray v Goodhews (1977) 52 TC 86
Rolfe v Nagel (1981) 55 TC 585
Commissioners of Income Tax v Savundranayagam (1957) 67 TC 239
IRC v Falkirk Ice Rink (1975) 51 TC 42
SC 3045/02