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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Special Commissioners of Income Tax Decisions >> HSBC Holdings Plc & Ors v Revenue & Customs [2007] UKSPC SPC00659 (19 December 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSPC/2007/SPC00659.html Cite as: [2007] UKSPC SPC659, [2007] UKSPC SPC00659 |
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Spc00659
THE SPECIAL COMMISSIONERS
(1) HSBC HOLDINGS PLC
(2) VIDACOS NOMINEES LIMITED Appellant
- and –
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS Respondent
Special Commissioner: JOHN CLARK
DIRECTIONS
UPON hearing Counsel for the Appellants and Counsel for the Respondents
AND UPON finding that it is necessary to enable the Special Commissioner to give judgment in this case to resolve questions concerning the interpretation of Articles 10, 11 and 12 of Council Directive 69/335 as amended by Council Directive 85/303/EEC of 10 June 1985 (OJ 1985 L 156 p.23) and Articles 12, 43, 49 and 56 of the Treaty establishing the European Community ("the EC Treaty") and that it is appropriate to request the Court of Justice of the European Communities ("the European Court") to give a preliminary ruling thereon
IT IS ORDERED that:
(1) The questions set out in the First Schedule to this Order concerning the interpretation of Articles 10, 11 and 12 of Council Directive 69/335 as amended by Council Directive 85/303/EEC of 10 June 1985 (OJ 1985 L 156 p.23) and Articles 12, 43, 49 and 56 of the EC Treaty be referred to the the European Court for a preliminary ruling in accordance with Article 234 of the EC Treaty.
(2) The Clerk forthwith transmit to the Registrar of the European Court of Justice:
a. this Order
b. the other documents listed in the Second Schedule to this Order
(3) All further proceedings in this appeal be stayed until the European Court has given its preliminary ruling on the questions referred to it or until further order.
JOHN CLARK
SPECIAL COMMISSIONER
FIRST SCHEDULE
REQUEST FOR A PRELIMINARY RULING OF
THE COURT OF JUSTICE OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES
The referring tribunal is the Special Commissioners. The Special Commissioners was established by section 4 of the Taxes Management Act 1970 for the special purposes of the Income Tax Acts. The Special Commissioners hear and determine appeals concerning decisions of the HM Revenue and Customs relating to all direct taxes. The jurisdiction of the Special Commissioners extends to the whole of the United Kingdom.
The following Agreed Statement of Facts (paragraphs 3.1-3.45 of this order) sets out the salient facts agreed by the parties which may be assumed for the purposes of the reference.
Introduction
The parties to the arrangements
The national law
Capital Duty
Stamp Duty and Stamp Duty Reserve Tax ("SDRT")
(a) By virtue of section 87(1) of the Act, agreements for the transfer of shares and other chargeable securities for a consideration in money or money's worth are subject to an SDRT charge at the rate of 0.5% of the amount or value of the consideration for the transfer. This charge is not payable where the transfer between the two parties is effected by means of a stock transfer form which is duly stamped (section 92 of the Act).
(b) Section 87(1) applies only to agreements to transfer "chargeable securities". "Chargeable securities" are defined by section 99 to mean shares issued by UK companies or shares in foreign companies where these are registered in a UK register (or 'paired' with shares issued by UK companies), together with certain other rights in and over such shares. Section 86(4) of the Act states that the charge applies wherever the transaction is carried out and irrespective of the residence of the parties.
(c) Section 96(1) and (2) of the Act provides:
(1) Subject to … sections 97 and 97A below, there shall be a charge to stamp duty reserve tax under this section where-
(a) a person (A) whose business is or includes the provision of clearance services for the purchase and sale of chargeable securities has entered into an arrangement to provide such clearance services for another person, and
(b) in pursuance of the arrangement, chargeable securities are transferred or issued to A or to a person whose business is or includes holding chargeable securities as nominee for A.
(2) …tax under this section shall be charged at the rate of 1.5% of the following:
(a) in a case where the securities are issued, their price when issued;
(b) in a case where the securities are transferred for consideration in money or money's worth, the amount or value of the consideration;
(c) in any other case, the value of the securities."
(d) The term "clearance service" is not defined by legislation, but the expression is generally understood to refer to a system for holding securities and settling transactions by book entry. As described in the Inland Revenue Stamp Taxes Manual:
"14.10 Typically, a clearance service is a system for holding securities and settling transactions in them by book entry. The securities may be held indefinitely within the system, despite changes in beneficial ownership and are held either by the company operating the clearance system or by its nominee, and are thus traded without the use of transfer documents.
- 11 Clearance services are common in continental European jurisdictions. It is common for shares to be in bearer form and this method provides physical security (the bearer certificates being held in a vault) whilst facilitating trading and settlement.
- 12 There is no SDRT on agreements to transfer securities held within a clearing service."
(e) After the initial charge, section 90(5) of the Act exempts transfers within the clearance service from the ordinary charge under section 87.
(f) Section 97A provides that the operator of a clearance service may, with the approval of the Inland Revenue, elect that stamp duty and SDRT shall instead be charged pursuant to that section. An election under section 97A comes into force on the date notified to the operator of the clearance service by the Inland Revenue in giving approval. During the period that the election is in force, stamp duty and SDRT are chargeable, in connection with the clearance services to which the election relates, (for example, on a transfer or issue under section 96(1)) as they would have been chargeable apart from section 96. Accordingly, where such an election is made and approved, transfers within the clearance service are taxed at the ordinary rate of 0.5% and no charge is imposed on the entry of the relevant shares into the clearance service.
(g) Section 97(4) (as amended) exempts from the charge under section 96 the issue of shares in exchange for other shares that are held within a 'clearance services scheme', where the issuer either has control of the other company or will do so in consequence of the offer under which the exchange is made. The effect of section 97(6) is that this applies only if the other shares are themselves chargeable securities.
The conditions for election under section 97A
(a) the following clearance services have made section 97A elections[6]:
- Sega Intersettle (International CSD ("ICSD") situated in Switzerland);
- Jiway Ltd (a UK incorporated company)[7];
- Euroclear Bank (in part[8]); and
- Clearstream (in part[9]).
The approximate length of time from the date that the operator of the clearance service made an initial approach to the Revenue with regard to a 97A election and the date that the election became effective following Revenue approval varied from between 6 and 16 months.
(b) the following clearance services (all of which hold UK chargeable securities) have not made section 97A elections:
- Euroclear Netherlands (National Central Securities Depositary ("NCSD") in the Netherlands);
- VPC (Swedish NCSD);
- VPS (Norwegian NCSD);
- Euroclear Belgium (Belgium NCSD);
- Euroclear France (French NCSD, formerly SICOVAM);
- Clearstream (in part[10]) (ICSD situated in Frankfurt); and
- Euroclear Bank (in part[11]) (ICSD situated in Belgium).
The stock exchanges and settlement systems
The Paris Stock Exchange
The SICOVAM clearance service
CREST
(a) to enable shares to be held in dematerialised form and to be transferred electronically in real time without certificates or paper transfers;
(b) to arrange for shares to be delivered against payment;
(c) to operate automatic direct links with company registrars;
(d) to enable transactions to be reported to markets and regulators (e.g. the London Stock Exchange and the Financial Services Authority);
(e) to collect SDRT in accordance with procedures agreed with the Revenue; and
(f) to facilitate transactions in certified form (but not to collect stamp duty on such transactions).[16]
(a) CREST is not a custodian, nominee or depositary in relation to shares held in the United Kingdom: it does not hold shares for others; it does not have any form of title to shares. Instead, it enables others to hold shares in an electronic dematerialised form, and facilitates settlement and execution of trades and other transfers. The entry of a shareholder on the electronic register maintained by CREST (and duplicated by the issuing company) is equivalent to the entry of certificated shares on an ordinary share register[17].
(b) A clearance service[18] (common in continental European jurisdictions), unlike CREST, holds shares. These shares are held either by the company operating the clearance system or its nominee. Changes in the beneficial ownership of the shares or, more usually, the civil law equivalent of beneficial ownership of the shares (i.e. rights in or over such shares) are settled by book entry and without the use of transfer documents.[19]
CREST and SDRT
The arrangements
(a) via SICOVAM, the French settlement system for shares traded on the Paris Stock Exchange (see paragraph 16 above);
(b) via CREST, the UK settlement system for shares in uncertificated form (see paragraph 22 above); and
(c) by registration on HSBC's share register in certificated form.
The charge to SDRT in relation to the arrangements
Subsequent events
The claim and appeal process
(a) that the charge under section 96 of the Act to SDRT was incompatible with Articles 10 and 11 of EC Directive 69/335/EEC, as amended and was in breach of the obligations of the UK under Articles 43 (right of establishment), 49 (freedom to provide services) and 56 (free movement of capital) of the EC Treaty, as amended; alternatively,
(b) that the transaction should have been treated as exempt under section 97(4) of the Act, the restriction of that exemption to cases where the target shares are held in a clearance service being invalid under EC law as discriminatory and a restriction on the freedoms already mentioned.
The Guidance Notes dated February 1998 issued by the Stamp Office of the Inland Revenue stated:
"Under Section 97A, as introduced by Finance Act 1996, the operator of a clearance service can elect that the clearance service charge does not apply. To do so an undertaking in writing must be agreed by the Inland Revenue. The terms of the undertaking will include:-
a. To collect and account for SDRT on the same basis as an operator of a dematerialised settlement service or an RIE subject to any different arrangement agreed with the Inland Revenue.
b. To provide systems to operate any reliefs, exceptions etc. or apply standard or higher rate charges to SDRT as appropriate and comply generally with the SDRT legislation and the SDRT notes for guidance.
c. To provide the Stamp Office with details of all liable or potentially liable transactions.
d. To secure written undertakings from participants in the clearance service that they are not themselves providing clearance services or operating a depositary receipt scheme or acting as nominees thereof. Failing the provision of such an undertaking the higher rate charge is to apply to any transfers to their account. The undertaking is to include a continuing requirement to notify any changes which would bring transfers within the higher rate charge. Where a participant operates a clearance service or is nominee for one and the operator has also made an election under Section 97A (as acknowledged by the Stamp Office), the standard rate and various exceptions etc. are to apply on transfers to that participant. The obligation to be contractually passed down onto clients of the participants and the clients of clients etc.
e. To secure an undertaking from participants to report and account for SDRT on transactions in chargeable securities which do not give rise to a system transaction, for example agency crosses.
f. To require participants to provide information and access to records as provided under the SDRT regulations. A non-resident operator is required either to maintain a UK fiscal representative in order to provide access to records and information or an electronic data terminal is to be provided to the Stamp Office together with an acceptable guarantor for payment of SDRT. Acceptable guarantors would be the bank operating the clearance service nominee if UK resident or a bank affiliate, if the nominee or operator is not resident in the UK. A participant waives confidentiality for the Stamp Office in respect of its dealings in chargeable securities held by the clearance service.
g. To undertake to disclose client identity where exceptions or exemptions from SDRT are claimed. A consequence of the election would be that participants would be relieved from making returns of SDRT liability to the extent that all such liable or relevant transactions in chargeable securities were reported or accounted via the operator of the clearance service.
h. To undertake to implement the higher rate charge in the event of system abuse by a participant. (The Stamp Office would infer that the participant is operating a clearance service or depositary service in the absence of evidence to the contrary.)"
The Inland Revenue Stamp Taxes Manual (2000 edn.[26]) stated:
"14.13 Under Section 97A FA 1986, the operator of a clearance service can elect that the clearance service charge does not apply provided that they enter into appropriate arrangements with the Inland Revenue under which they will account for 0.5% charges arising on transfers within the clearance service. You should seek advice from a Deputy Director if anyone suggests entering into such an arrangement with us.
14.14 The details of any such arrangement will depend on the particular circumstances involved, but some of the main issues to be considered in this context are:-
comparability with the procedures for accounting for SDRT through CREST;
ensuring that all chargeable transactions are reported and duty paid;
considering how higher rate charges and any reliefs would be administered;
ensuring a flow of information for audit purposes that is accessible in the UK;
preventing participants operating clearing services under cover of the arrangements;
the need for an overseas clearance service to appoint a UK fiscal representative; and
noting that section 97A enables us to terminate the election on notice."
A copy of chapter 14 of the current version of the Stamp Taxes Manual (2002) (which, in relation to the above passage, is in identical form to the 2000 Stamp Taxes Manual) is exhibited to this Agreed Statement at Exhibit "SOF1".
Euroclear Consultation Paper
Appendix 1: UK SDRT and Irish stamp duty processing
Stamp Taxes Manual (March 2002)
Chapter 14: SDRT: Depositary receipts and clearance services
(1) The charge to SDRT contravened articles 10 and 11 of the Capital Duty Directive. In particular, the event giving rise to the charge was the raising or increase of capital and/or on the issue of shares and/or on the admission of shares to quotation on a stock exchange. Given that the tax thereby fell within article 10 and/or article 11, it could not also be a tax within (the mutually exclusive) article 12 of the Capital Duty Directive and was prohibited; and/or
(2) The charge to SDRT violated the fundamental freedoms in Articles 43, 49 and 56 of the EC Treaty in that (a) the charge impeded or rendered less attractive the exercise of each of the freedoms and (b) the charge was not justified by the need to prevent purely artificial tax avoidance, fiscal cohesion or on any other legitimate ground; and/or
(3) The transaction should have been treated as exempt under s97(4) Finance Act 1986 on the grounds that the restriction of that exemption to situations where the target shares are (in effect) UK companies is discriminatory and contrary, inter alia, to article 12 of the EC Treaty.
(4) The charge to SDRT falls within article 12 of the Capital Duty Directive as a tax on transfer because (a) the 1.5% charge is a 'season ticket' charge that is a means of paying in advance and in lieu the SDRT that would otherwise fall due to be paid at 0.5% for each future transfer of the share within the clearance service; and/or (b) the charge is not obligatorily payable since the operator has the opportunity to elect under section 97A instead to account for the standard 0.5% charge on transfers, provided it meets the conditions for such election imposed by HMRC.
(5) Articles 43, 49 and 56 are not infringed by the charge to SDRT because the operator of clearance services in a Member State other than the UK is placed in the same position as an operator in the UK and, as a result, the charge entails no direct or indirect discrimination on grounds of nationality and does not create an impediment to trade.
(6) Section 97(4) is not discriminatory because (a) it is permissible to afford exemption from charge where an amount has already been paid to cover future transactions but not to afford such exemption where that is not the case and/or (b) the operator could have avoided the charge had it made a section 97A election.
In light of these respective contentions, a ruling of the European Court is considered appropriate to resolve the matters in dispute between the parties. Accordingly, the Special Commissioners refer the following question to the European Court:
Does Article 10 or Article 11 of Council Directive 69/335, as amended by Council Directive 85/303/EEC of 10 June 1985 (OJ 1985 L 156, p. 23), or Article 43, Article 49 or Article 56 of the EC Treaty or any other provision of European Community law prohibit the levying by one Member State ("the first Member State") of a duty on the transfer or issue of shares into a clearance service of 1.5% when:
i. a company ("Company A") established in the first Member State offers to acquire the listed and traded shares in a company ("Company B") established in another Member State ("the second Member State") in return for shares in Company A, to be issued on the stock exchange in the second Member State;
ii. shareholders in Company B have the option to receive the new shares in Company A either:
a. in certificated form; or
b. in un-certificated form through a settlement system in the first Member State; or
c. in un-certificated form through a clearance service in the second Member State;
iii. the law of the first Member State provides, in summary, that:
a. in the event of the issue of shares in certificated form (or in un-certificated form in the settlement system for dematerialised shares of the first Member State), duty shall not be charged on the issue of the shares but on each subsequent sale of the shares, which duty is charged at the rate of 0.5% of the consideration for the transfer; but
b. on the transfer or issue of un-certificated shares to the operator of a clearance service, duty shall be charged (where the shares are issued) at the rate of 1.5% of the issue price or (where the shares are transferred for consideration) at the rate of 1.5% of the amount or value of the consideration or, (in any other case) at the rate of 1.5% of the value of the shares and, no subsequent charge is thereafter levied on sales of the shares (or of rights to or over the shares) within the clearance service.
c. the operator of a clearance service may, where it receives the approval of the relevant taxation authority, elect that no duty is charged on the transfer or issue of the shares to its clearance service, but that duty is instead charged on each sale of the shares within the clearance service, at the rate of 0.5% of the consideration. The relevant taxation authority may (and presently does) require, as a condition for its approval of such an election, that the operator of the clearance system seeking to make such an election should make and maintain arrangements (as the taxation authority considers satisfactory) for the collection of the duty within the clearance service and for complying or securing compliance with the regulations in relation to it.
iv. the arrangements in force at the stock exchange in the second Member State require that all shares issued in that jurisdiction must be held in un- certificated form through a single clearance service established in the second Member State, the operator of which has not made the election referred to above?
SECOND SCHEDULE
Documents included in the bundles of documents along with this Order
Notice of Determination dated 6 August 2004 | |
Letter of appeal dated 2 September 2004 | |
Offer document | |
Correspondence | |
Sections 141, 148 and Schedule 14 to the Finance Act 1988 | |
Part IV of the Finance Act 1986 | |
The Stamp Duty Reserve Tax Regulations 1986 (1986 No. 1711) | |
Inland Revenue Budget Press Release dated 28 November 1995 | |
Stamp Duty Reserve Tax Notes for Guidance, Chapter 6 (February 1998) | |
Stamp Taxes Manual, Chapter 14 (2000) | |
Stamp Taxes Manual, Chapter 14 (March 2002) | |
Witness statement of NC McCarthy signed 21 June 2007 | |
Exhibit to witness statement of NC McCarthy | |
Witness statement of M Harwood signed 10 October 2007 | |
Witness statement of DC Stuttaford signed 20 November 2007 | |
Exhibit to witness statement of DC Stuttaford | |
Supplementary witness statement of M Harwood signed 26 November 2007 | |
Supplementary witness statement of DC Stuttaford signed 27 November 2007 |
Note 1 Stamp Taxes Manual (2002) para 1.6. [Back] Note 2 Stamp Taxes Manual (2002) para 1.18. [Back] Note 3 Published in May 2000. [Back] Note 4 Identified in footnotes 6 and 8-11 to paragraph 14 below. [Back] Note 5 See paragraph 10 and Appendix 1 to this Agreed Statement of Facts. [Back] Note 6 Sega Intersettle, Euroclear Bank and Clearstream ICSDs operate bicameral systems: one part has made a section 97A election and one part has not. [Back] Note 7 Jiway has since ceased trading. [Back] Note 8 Sega Intersettle, Euroclear Bank and Clearstream ICSDs operate bicameral systems: one part has made a section 97A election and one part has not. [Back] Note 13 Within CREST (described below), the transferor is automatically debited with the 1.5% charge, unless the participant otherwise stipulates. [Back] Note 14 The Uncertificated Securities Regulations 1995 SI 1995/3272, which were in force at the time of the HSBC offer, although since replaced by the Uncertificated Securities Regulations 2001 SI 2001/3755. [Back] Note 15 Stamp Taxes Manual (2002) para 1.18 [Back] Note 16 Stamp Taxes Manual (2002) para 10.18 [Back] Note 17 Regulation 20 of the 1995 Regulations. (See now regulation 24 of the 2001 Regulations). Individual shareholders may hold uncertificated shares directly (in which case, they must be members of CREST) or through nominees (who would themselves be members of CREST). [Back] Note 18 See paragraph 9(d) above. [Back] Note 19 Stamp Taxes Manual (2002) para 14.10. [Back] Note 20 Extracted from the Euroclear Consultation Paper entitled "Miscellaneous items on the single platform" dated 5 May 2006 [Back] Note 21 See Stamp Taxes Manual (2002) paras 10.26-10.32. [Back] Note 22 Offer Document, p.9. [Back] Note 23 Offer Document p. 10. [Back] Note 24 Offer Document p.10 [Back] Note 25 The issue of a notice of determination was a prerequisite to the commencement of proceedings by HSBC for the repayment of the SDRT it had paid. [Back]