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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Special Commissioners of Income Tax Decisions >> Demibourne Ltd v Revenue and Customs [2005] UKSPC SPC00486 (23 June 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSPC/2005/SPC00486.html Cite as: [2005] UKSPC 00486, [2005] UKSPC SPC00486, [2005] UKSPC SPC486 |
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Demibourne Ltd v Revenue and Customs [2005] UKSPC SPC00486 (23 June 2005)
SPC00486
Income tax – PAYE determinations – whether individual an employee – determinations confirmed
National insurance – secondary contributions – whether individual an employed earner – decision confirmed
Jurisdiction – "legitimate expectation" – appropriate forum for remedy – whether basis for claim
THE SPECIAL COMMISSIONERS
DEMIBOURNE LTD Appellant
- and -
HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS Respondent
Special Commissioner: JOHN CLARK
Sitting in public in London on 22 April 2005
Oliver Conolly of counsel, instructed by Amin, Patel & Shah, Accountants, for the Appellant
Mike Faulkner, Southern England Regional Appeals Unit, Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs, for the Respondent
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2005
DECISION
The facts
(1) Demibourne acquired the Frensham Pond Hotel, located in Surrey, on 16 November 1987. The purchase agreement acknowledged that it was governed by the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 1981 (SI 1981/1794).
(2) Mr Bone was employed by the vendor of the hotel, and under the sale agreement his contract was transferred to Demibourne. Mr Bone was employed by (and the appropriate deductions were made by) Demibourne until April 1993, when he reached the age of 65.
(3) Between April 1993 and April 2002 he continued working at the hotel, but PAYE was not operated and he was regarded as self-employed.
(4) A Compliance Office of HMRC visited the hotel in January 2002 and expressed the view that Mr Bone was an employee. She confirmed her opinion in a letter of 31 January to Mr Halstead.
(5) Demibourne operated PAYE on Mr Bone's earnings from 6 April 2002 to 31 January 2004. Mr Bone ceased working for Demibourne at some time around April 2004.
(6) There has never been a written contract between Demibourne and Mr Bone.
(7) Mr Bone undertook all general maintenance for the hotel, including looking after the sewage system. There was no change in the nature of the work that he carried out or the terms and conditions under which he worked after Demibourne stopped operating PAYE.
(8) The Duty Manager at the hotel would show Mr Bone what needed to be repaired or maintained.
Mr Halstead's evidence
Mr Patel's evidence
Mr Bone's evidence
Findings of fact
"Please note that it is not Revenue practice to charge tax twice and any tax already paid on Mr Bones [sic] earnings will be taken into consideration."
Contentions for Demibourne
(1) That Mr Bone was not employed but self-employed during the period in issue, and thus no PAYE and no National Insurance Contributions were due: following the approach in Hall v Lorimer 66 TC 349 at 375, [1994] STC 23 at 29, in deciding whether an individual was employed or self-employed, an overall view of the facts must be considered, giving due weight to the relative significance of the various factors in that particular context; applying this approach, the factors led inexorably to the conclusion that Mr Bone was self-employed during the years in issue;
(2) That if there were any ambiguity in the relationship, the expressed intention of the parties that Mr Bone was to work as an independent contractor was decisive;
(3) That instead of making a determination under regulation 49, HMRC should have made a direction under regulation 42(2) that the tax be recovered from the employee;
(4) In the alternative, that the determinations under regulation 49 were invalid because tax had been paid on the income received by Mr Bone, and it was a condition of making a regulation 49 determination that tax had not been paid to the collector;
(5) That Demibourne had a legitimate expectation that its liability would be reduced by the tax paid by Mr Bone for the relevant years.
Contentions for HMRC
(1) That following the comments of Nolan LJ in Hall v Lorimer, approving those of Mummery J, the process of considering the factors in relation to an employment dispute was not a mechanical exercise but more akin to painting a picture from the accumulation of detail;
(2) That it was the right of control that mattered, not its exercise;
(3) That Mr Bone was not required to risk his own capital;
(4) That Mr Bone had provided tools both when he had been an employee and for the period in dispute, so that the provision was a neutral factor;
(5) That there was no suggestion that either party ever contemplated that work would be undertaken by anyone other than Mr Bone;
(6) That there was mutuality of obligation as described in Ready Mixed Concrete (South East) Ltd v Minister of Pensions and National Insurance [1968] 2 QB 497; the irreducible minimum of obligation could be inferred from the longevity of the working relationship;
(7) That any work done for others was not significant, and that in any event an individual could carry on a self-employed business while working as an employee; this did not automatically make the employed work part of his business;
(8) That although this was not an absolute distinction, payment by reference to a particular project was more characteristic of self-employment, whereas payment for hours worked was more characteristic of employment;
(9) That the absence of holiday pay did not necessarily indicate self-employment but was usually an indication of how the parties viewed their relationship: in the present case, Mr Bone had "accepted the only deal he thought was on the table";
(10) That if Mr Bone's disputed contract came to an end in April 2002, there was no evidence of any change in his conditions of engagement throughout the whole period for which he worked at the hotel, and this was good evidence that he was an employee in the disputed period between the two acknowledged periods of employment: if it were argued that Mr Bone was treated as an employee after April 2002 only as a precautionary measure, there was no evidence of a change in his conditions before and after he was 65.
(11) That Mr Bone was "part and parcel" of Demibourne's organisation;
(12) That the intention of the parties could be decisive where the relationship was ambiguous and where the other factors were neutral; however, the only mutual intention when Mr Bone reached 65 was that he should continue to work at the hotel: Demibourne had said that it would only accept this if Mr Bone were self-employed, and he had acquiesced; the relationship was not ambiguous and the other factors pointed firmly towards employment;
(13) That the contract between Demibourne and Mr Bone was one of employment;
(14) That Demibourne had not produced details of the amounts paid to Mr Bone;
(15) That the regulation 49 determinations and the section 8 decision should be confirmed.
Legitimate expectation
(1) That the tribunal did not have jurisdiction to consider legitimate expectation.
(2) In the alternative, that the doctrine did not apply in this case, given the facts.
(3) That HMRC did not have jurisdiction within the statutory framework to choose whether to collect the tax from Mr Bone or Demibourne.
(4) That the statement relied on by Demibourne was made at a time when the Employer Compliance Officer had no reason to believe that her view was disputed and that the case would not be settled by agreement.
(5) That in relation to the issue of confidentiality, Mr Bone had indicated that he was not prepared voluntarily to disclose his income to Demibourne.
Discussion and conclusions
"Clearly, the greater the court's confidence in the bona fides of the parties the greater must be the significance which attaches to a clear expression of intention that the relationship would be that of employer and independent contractor."
PAYE
Legitimate expectation
" . . . and if it were appropriate for the Appellant to raise the question of legitimate expectation, this could only be done through the courts, rather than through this tribunal."
Summary
JOHN CLARK
SPECIAL COMMISSIONER
RELEASE DATE: 23 June 2005
SC/3068/2004
Authorities referred to in skeletons and not referred to in the decision:
Barnett v Brabyn [1996] STC 716
O'Kelly v Trusthouse Forte [1984] QB 90
Kleinwort Benson v Lincoln City Council [1999] 2 AC 349
Market Investigations Ltd v Minister of Social Security [1969] 2 QB 173
Lee Ting Sang v Chung Chi-Keung [1990] 2 AC 374
Nethermere (St Neots) Ltd v Gardiner [1984] ICR 612