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United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions >> Twycross Zoo East Midland Zoological Society v Revenue & Customs [2006] UKVAT V19548 (18 April 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2006/V19548.html Cite as: [2006] UKVAT V19548 |
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Twycross Zoo East Midland Zoological Society v Revenue & Customs [2006] UKVAT V19548 (18 April 2006)
19548
VAT – input tax – zoo – whether expenditure on keeping animals in zoo attributable not only to exempt admission charges but also to various taxable supplies – held applicable only to admission charges – input tax in question attributable exclusively to exempt supplies - appeal dismissed
MANCHESTER TRIBUNAL CENTRE
TWYCROSS ZOO EAST MIDLAND ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY Appellant
- and -
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR
HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS Respondents
Tribunal: David Demack (Chairman)
Peter Whitehead (Member)
Sitting in public in Manchester on 22 and 23 February 2006
Leslie Allen of Messrs Dorsey & Whitney, VAT consultants, for the Appellant
Valentina Sloane of counsel, instructed by the Acting Solicitor for HM Revenue and Customs for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2006
DECISION
Facts
(1) To educate the public in greater knowledge, interest and appreciation of fauna, flora and the natural kingdom.
(2) To promote, facilitate and encourage the study of biology, zoology, veterinary science, animal physiology, aviculture, aquaria, ichthyology, entomology, botany, agriculture, horticulture and kindred sciences and to disseminate the results.
(3) To provide and assist in the provision of facilities for recreation or other leisure time occupation in the interests of social welfare.
(a) capital expenditure on animal enclosures;
(b) expenditure on welding the cages and other repairs;
(c) veterinary services;
(d) cleaning and pest control; and
(e) food and bedding
(a) adopt an animal scheme;
(b) animal encounters experience;
(c) kiosks;
(d) cafés;
(e) gift shops;
(f) sales of guide books;
(g) fares for travelling on the mini railway; and
(f) provision of conference facilities.
Legislation
Case Law on the correct interpretation of the legislation
(a) It is not sufficient to show that the supplies on which tax is paid (in the instant case, the costs of keeping and displaying the animals) are "used" in a general sense to make the Society's subsidiary commercial supplies. "Use" in this context means specifically that the goods and services in question "must have a direct and immediate link with the taxable transactions and that the ultimate aim pursued by the taxable person is irrelevant", (see the judgment of the Court of Justice of the European Communities ("the ECJ") in BLP Group Plc v Customs & Excise Commissioners [1995] STC 424 at paragraph 19).
(b) Moreover, the "direct and immediate" test has the following further, specific meaning:
"In order to give rise to the right to deduct, the goods or services acquired must have a direct and immediate link with the taxable transactions, that the right to deduct the VAT charged on such goods or services presupposes that the expenditure incurred in obtaining them was part of the costs components of the taxable transactions. Such expenditure must therefore be part of the cost of the output transactions which utilise the goods and services acquired."
(paragraph 30 of the judgment of the ECJ in Midland Bank plc v Customs & Excise Commissioners [2000] STC 501)
(c) Further, "the link must be identifiable according to objective criteria; that generally means that the link should reflect the normal relationship between the two suppliers" (paragraph 31 of the judgment of the ECJ in Midland Bank)
(d) In considering whether there is an immediate and direct link, the transactions must be considered individually, "component transaction by component transaction", rather than in a generalised way, per Jacob L J at paragraph 37 of his judgment in Customs & Excise Commissioners v Southern Primary Housing Association Limited [2004] STC 209.
(e) Importantly, the fact that a transaction is commercially necessary for the taxable supply does not create a direct and immediate link – that is a "but for" test. The "but for" test is not the direct and immediate link /cost component test. As Jacob L J explained at paragraph 32 in his judgment in the Southern Primary case:
"The land purchase transaction was commercially necessary to make its performance commercially possible, but it was not a cost component of the contract itself in the same way as the costs of the materials used. There is a link with the contract but the link was not direct or immediate. The development contract would not have been made but for the associated land purchase and sale. But 'but for' is not the test and does not equate to the 'direct and immediate link' and 'cost component' test".
(f) Further, in considering the link transaction by transaction:
"What matters is whether there is a sufficient link of that kind with the relevant taxable supply and for the purpose of answering this question one has to take into account any intervening exempt transaction for which the same taxable services have been used. If, as in BLP, the services were used for the purposes of an exempt supply it matters not that the same input might as a component part of that exempt supply also properly be treated as a cost component of the subsequent output supply. Their use for the purposes of the exempt supply breaks the causal link for VAT purposes"
per Patten J in RAP Group plc v Customs & Excise Commissioners [2000] STC 980 at paragraph 17).
(g) The "chain-breaking effect" of an exempt transaction was correctly explained by the tribunal in Royal Agricultural College v Commissioners of Customs and Excise (2001) Decision No. 17508. In that case, the tribunal was concerned with a claim by the college that expenditure incurred on advertising 'the Cirencester experience" for students was attributable not only to its exempt supplies of education but also to the taxable supplies made through its bar and shop. The tribunal rejected the claim, saying at paragraph 43 of it decision:
"The marketing costs incurred by the Appellant have a direct and immediate link with the provision of the exempt supply of education to students who enrol in courses as a consequence of that marketing. There is not the same direct and immediate link to the subsequent provision of taxable supplies through the shop and bar. The second step does not have a direct and immediate link; it has an indirect and subsequent link. The tribunal finds therefore that the direct and immediate link required in order to allow the marketing costs to become a cost component of that subsequent taxable supply does not exist, the link being broken. As Advocate General Jacobs said in the case of Abbey National plc v Commissioners of Customs and Excise [2001] STC 297: 'Nevertheless, it remains clear from BLP that the "chain-breaking" which is an inherent feature of an exempt transaction will always prevent VAT incurred on supplies used for such a transaction from being deductible from VAT to be paid on a subsequent output supply of which the exempt transaction forms a cost component. The need for a "direct and immediate link" thus does not refer exclusively to the very next link in the chain but serves to exclude situations where the chain has been broken by an exempt supply' ".
(h) The test is a mixed question of fact and law, which is exceptionally fact sensitive. As Jonathan Parker LJ explained at paragraph 72 of his judgment in Dial-A-Phone v Commissioners of Customs and Excise [2004] STC 987:
"By its very nature the BLP test is fact-sensitive, in the sense that its application inevitably requires a qualitative judgment to be made on the basis of the facts (as found or admitted) relating to the transactions in question."
- In summary, the cases:
(a) require the transactions to be analysed on a transaction by transaction basis;
(b) require an analysis of whether the costs incurred are used in the supply, that is a determination of whether the costs are components of the cost of supply;
(c) require that examination to be factual and objective;
(d) indicate that where there is no direct link of a cost component nature, VAT on the supply is irrecoverable; and
(e) also indicate that where there is an exempt transaction in the chain, the chain of recovery is broken.
Submissions for the Commissioners
- Miss Sloane observed that it was central to the Society's argument that the animals were "exploited" in a variety of ways in order to generate income and that income could not be generated but for the animals. It focused on a general "use" test. Thus, the Society claimed that its aims were not simply entrance to a zoo, it having various aims and objects which needed income to meet them. The Society further maintained that it generated income by using its assets in a number of ways, some taxable, some exempt, the animals generating both taxable and exempt income. Miss Sloane maintained that the Society had to put its case in that way because, as a matter of fact, there was no direct and immediate link. What was asserted instead was a generalised link (neither direct nor immediate) between maintaining the animals and making subsidiary commercial sales, e.g. selling animal related products in its shop. Thus, the Society exhibited animals (in return for ticket sales which granted a right to see those animals) and took that opportunity to generate additional income by selling merchandise and catering, and raising additional funds from adoptions and encounters.
- Miss Sloane maintained that five points followed from the Society's presentation of its case:
(a) To say that the animals were "exploited" in a variety of ways was not sufficient to enable recovery of the VAT incurred on maintaining the animals. The Society's argument, put at its highest, was that the animals were "used" in a general sense to generate income from taxable supplies. She maintained that that was not the test: it ignored the requirement that "use" in that context needed a "direct and immediate link so as to be a cost component" between the animals and the subsidiary commercial activities;
(b) To say that there would be no commercial sales (of merchandise, catering, and adoptions) without the animals was only to say that "but for" the existence of its principal business of exhibiting animals, the Society would not make those sales. Again, Miss Sloane maintained that that was not the test
(c) Nor, she claimed, was the commercial necessity of making taxable supplies to generate income the test
(d) Further, the Society could not simply look at the sources of all of its income taken together and conclude that all its supplies had the animal costs as their cost components. One must look at each supply made and ask which costs were (directly) its cost components
(e) That the Society could rely only on the generalised link was fatal to its claim.
(a) The cost components of the catering and merchandising supplies were the costs of purchasing the stock, construction, repairs and maintenance of the retail and catering outlets. (The Commissioners had already recognised all those costs as directly attributable to the taxable supplies and so acknowledged that they were recoverable by the Society in full)
(b) The costs of keeping the animals was not associated in any way with the actual costs of, say, making the catering supplies or the animal adoption supply
(c) The keeping of the animals might be commercially necessary in order to make performance of the subsidiary, commercial activities possible, but it was not a cost component of each of those commercial activities in the same way as, say, the cost of stock for the shop or the cost of producing an animal adoption certificate
(d) There was a direct and immediate link between the animal costs and the exempt supply of admission to view the animals exhibited. The link between those costs and the Society's other commercial activities was indirect and subsequent
(e) The commercial activities "piggy-backed" on the exempt supply of exhibiting animals. That exempt supply had a "chain-breaking effect"
Submissions for the Society
"thus Southern Primary is authority for the proposition that the mere fact that 'but for' the input costs in question taxable supplies would not have been made is not enough to establish the required "direct and immediate link" between the input costs and the taxable supplies"
"the costs incurred by the transferor for services acquired in order to effect that transfer form part of the taxable persons overheads and thus in principle have direct and immediate link with the whole of his economic activity"
Conclusion
"Thus Southern Primary is authority for the proposition that the mere fact that 'but for' the input cost in question taxable supplies would not have been made is not enough to establish the requisite 'direct and immediate link' between the input cost and the taxable supplies."
DAVID DEMACK
CHAIRMAN
Release Date:
MAN/04/0682