[2024] UKSC 25
On appeal from: [2022] EWCA Civ 1520
JUDGMENT
Centrica Overseas Holdings Ltd (Appellant) vCommissioners for His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (Respondent)
before
Lord Hodge, Deputy President
Lord Stephens
Lady Rose
Lord Richards
Lady Simler
16 July 2024
Heard on 19 March 2024
Appellant
James Rivett KC
Ronan Magee
(Instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP (London))
Respondent
David Ewart KC
James Henderson
Barbara Belgrano
(Instructed by HMRC Solicitors Office & Legal Services (Stratford))
LADY SIMLER (with whom Lord Hodge, Lord Stephens, Lady Rose and Lord Richards agree):
Introduction
This appeal raises the question whether professional advisory fees can be deducted by a holding company with investment business when calculating its profits for the purposes of determining its liability to corporation tax in the circumstances described below. The deduction of “expenses of management” is provided for by section 1219 of the Corporation Tax Act 2009 (“the 2009 Act”). Like trading companies which can deduct revenue expenses (albeit in their case, only when incurred wholly and exclusively for the purposes of their trade), investment companies cannot deduct expenses of management if they constitute capital expenditure because there is an express carve out in section 1219(3)(a) for expenses of management “of a capital nature”. The question on this appeal, accordingly, is whether the professional advisory fees, though now accepted as expenses of management, were revenue or capital expenditure for deduction purposes.
The question arises in the context of an investment holding company within a corporate group. That context is important. An investment holding company is different from an investment dealing company or trading business. The principal activity of an investment holding company, whether the “topco” of a group or an intermediate holding company, is to hold investments. Its investments are capital investments held in its subsidiaries for the purposes of long-term investment, from which it derives value. Its investment business is the holding of shares and the arrangement of the affairs of its subsidiaries which that holding enables, including the disposal and acquisition of companies, the general control of the subsidiaries to ensure their value is maintained, and the bringing in of income in the form of dividends from those subsidiaries. In other words, its business is to manage its capital assets, not to trade with them.
The appellant is Centrica Overseas Holdings Limited (“COHL”), an intermediate holding company in the Centrica Plc group. In July 2005, COHL acquired the share capital of Oxxio BV (“Oxxio”), a Dutch holding company with four subsidiaries. Centrica Plc resolved to sell Oxxio in June or July 2009. In March 2011, following a lengthy process, the assets of two of the Oxxio subsidiaries and the shares in a third subsidiary were sold by COHL to the Eneco Group NV (“Eneco”). Between July 2009 and March 2011, COHL paid professional fees in connection with that transaction for services ranging from considering how best to realise value from the Oxxio business to advice on structuring and preparing the details of the final transaction. The services were provided by Deutsche Bank AG London (“Deutsche Bank”), PricewaterhouseCoopers (“PwC”) and De Brauw Blackstone Westbroek (“De Brauw”).
The fees disbursed by COHL for those services up to 22 February 2011 totalled £2,529,697. The fees were claimed by COHL as a deduction for revenue expenses of management of its investment business under section 1219 of the 2009 Act in its company tax return for the accounting period ending 31 December 2011. I shall refer to these fees, as they have been referred to below, as “the Disputed Expenditure”.
COHL’s claim for relief was disallowed in its entirety by the Commissioners for His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (“HMRC”) on the basis that the Disputed Expenditure was not deductible under section 1219 because it was not an expense of management and even if it was, it was capital in any event and so excluded by section 1219(3)(a) of the 2009 Act. COHL appealed that decision.
Although COHL’s appeal to the First-tier Tribunal (Judge Marilyn McKeever, “the FTT”) was dismissed on a basis that is no longer relevant, in a detailed and careful decision dated 23 April 2020 [2020] UKFTT 197 (TC), the FTT analysed the professional and advisory services provided to COHL and concluded that most of the fees paid to Deutsche Bank (including a contingent fee) and PwC, and possibly some to De Brauw, were properly viewed as expenses of management. On appeal the Upper Tribunal (Fancourt J and Judge Jonathan Cannan, “the UT”) was satisfied that the FTT had applied the correct legal test and was entitled to reach the conclusion that expenditure on the fees of Deutsche Bank and PwC was expenses of management. There was less clarity about the findings related to the De Brauw fees and this issue was remitted to the FTT for further determination: [2021] UKUT 200 (TCC), [2021] STC 1842.
So far as the capital expenditure question is concerned:
The FTT noted that the disposal of the Oxxio business was a capital transaction. Fees for services of Deutsche Bank and PwC incurred up to the offer made by Eneco in January 2011 were nonetheless revenue expenses of management and deductible; those incurred afterwards were incidental to the transaction and capital in nature. The UT agreed, stating that, in a case like this, expenses of management are likely to be revenue expenses because the test is similar; the expenditure was not one-off in nature because COHL had many capital investments apart from Oxxio which might involve management from time to time including appraising an acquisition, disposal or restructuring; and because the Oxxio business would not necessarily be sold.
However, the FTT found that the De Brauw fees were in a different category. Their work was all, or mostly, to do with a potential or actual transaction, its effect being to bring about the disposal of the Oxxio business. The FTT held that the De Brauw fees were therefore capital in nature. The UT disagreed: to the extent that the De Brauw fees were expenses of management because they informed decision-making about the disposal of the Oxxio business, the UT held they were revenue in nature and the FTT was wrong to hold otherwise. The correct treatment of the De Brauw fees was remitted to the FTT.
In the Court of Appeal, Singh LJ (with whom Newey LJ and Sir Launcelot Henderson agreed) held that the FTT was entitled to conclude that the Disputed Expenditure constituted expenses of management within section 1219(1) of the 2009 Act. There is no appeal from that decision. On the separate question whether the fees were capital in nature, the Court of Appeal held that the applicable test in this context is different from the test for whether expenditure is an expense of management. The FTT had conflated the two in error of law and the error was not corrected by the UT. The test is the same as that for capital expenditure for an ordinary trading business. Whether an item of expenditure is revenue or capital in nature is a question of law and accordingly, the Court of Appeal was required to resolve this question applying the findings of fact made by the FTT. It held that the Disputed Expenditure was capital in nature and not deductible as an expense of management accordingly: [2022] EWCA Civ 1520, [2023] 1 WLR 316.
COHL now appeals to the Supreme Court on the capital expenditure question only. There are two grounds of appeal:
Ground 1 contends that the Court of Appeal erred in finding that, in the context of section 1219 of the 2009 Act, the scope of “expenses of management” of an investment business which are of “a capital nature” and therefore excluded by section 1219(3)(a) is to be identified on the basis of the principles which apply for the identification of expenditure which constitutes “items of a capital nature” incurred by a trading company and excluded by section 53(1) of the 2009 Act.
Ground 2 contends that the Court of Appeal failed in any event to identify that, based on the unchallenged findings of primary fact made by the FTT, the Disputed Expenditure did not constitute expenses “of a capital nature” for the purposes of section 1219(3)(a) even if the applicable principles are those that apply in the context of section 53(1) of the 2009 Act.
COHL’s case in essentials is that the exclusion for expenditure of a capital nature in section 1219(3)(a) of the 2009 Act is different to that in section 53(1) and has very limited effect. It serves only to ensure that there is no deduction for the acquisition costs of investments made by an investment business, together with a limited category of items of fixed capital (such as the acquisition costs of a building from which the investment business is conducted). The exception was enacted simply to make plain that a taxpayer with investment business cannot deduct this narrow category of expenditure which might constitute expenses of management (given the width of that concept as interpreted by the courts). It serves no wider purpose. On this basis, the Court of Appeal was not entitled to interfere with the evaluation of the specialist tribunals that the Disputed Expenditure was not capital expenses of management and not therefore excluded by the provisions of section 1219(3)(a).
COHL’s alternative case, if its primary argument is rejected, is that existing case law in relation to section 53(1) of the 2009 Act itself emphasises that the capital/revenue analysis turns in large part upon the nature of the business in question, and investment businesses present a very different context to the business of trading companies. Applying that approach, the circumstances are such that expenditure relating to the core function of an investment management business is not excluded as capital expenditure. Whatever the scope of the concept of capital expenditure in this context, COHL also contends that the unchallenged findings made by the FTT demonstrate that the Disputed Expenditure was incurred to procure advice to enable decisions to be made about how to realise value from the Oxxio business. Such expenditure is not capable of being properly characterised as capital expenditure.
For reasons I shall develop below, I respectfully agree with the Court of Appeal’s judgment and do not accept COHL’s arguments. In summary, there is a clear distinction between the question whether something is an expense of management and the separate question whether that expense is capital in nature and the FTT and UT wrongly conflated the two. The phrase “expenses of a capital nature” in section 1219(3)(a) of the 2009 Act has the same meaning as “items of a capital nature” in section 53(1) of the same Act, and the well-established principles applicable to distinguishing between capital and revenue expenditure in the context of trading companies apply equally in this context. Further, the question whether expenditure is capital or revenue in nature is a question of law. The primary findings of fact made by the FTT (which are not open to challenge on this appeal) lead to the conclusion that the Disputed Expenditure, while constituting expenses of management of COHL’s business, was of a capital nature. A commercial decision was taken to sell the Oxxio business, an identifiable capital asset. The object and purpose (in an objective sense) of the Disputed Expenditure was to obtain advice and services to achieve that disposal. That different options were considered and there was a possibility of the transaction not going through, does not alter the commercial reality that a decision had been taken to dispose of Oxxio. The Disputed Expenditure was one-off in nature. The fact that COHL has many capital investments apart from Oxxio which might involve management from time to time including in appraising an acquisition, disposal or restructuring does not alter that. Nor does this conclusion prevent expenses of an investment company from being deductible as revenue expenses of management. Its day-to-day costs of staff dealing with the business of management, rents, administration costs and repairs are all deductible revenue expenses of management, and not capital in nature. Like the Court of Appeal, I consider that all the Disputed Expenditure was capital in nature and falls within the exception in section 1219(3)(a) of the 2009 Act. Accordingly, I would dismiss this appeal.
The relevantlegislation
Part 16 of the 2009 Act is concerned with companies with investment business. A company with investment business is defined by section 1218(1) of the 2009 Act as a company whose business consists wholly or partly of making investments (section 1218 was renumbered as section 1218B with effect from 1 April 2014, but is otherwise identical). It includes holding companies and intermediate holding companies, which acquire investments with a view to holding them. It is common ground that COHL was a “company with investment business” for these purposes.
COHL is therefore liable to corporation tax on its “profits” derived from its investments, which are defined by section 2(2) of the 2009 Act to mean “income and chargeable gains” except where the context otherwise requires. Its profits in the form of income (computed in accordance with income tax principles) and its profits in the form of chargeable gains (computed in accordance with capital gains tax principles under section 2D(1) of the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 (the “TCGA”)) are aggregated for the relevant accounting period to arrive at the “total profits”: see section 4 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010. At this stage any amounts which can be relieved against the company’s total profits of the period are deducted from the aggregate amount (see section 4 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010) and this is where section 1219 of the 2009 Act comes into play.
The relief in section 1219 (as amended by section 1177 and schedule 1 para 683 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 for accounting periods ending on or after 1 April 2010) is provided for, so far as material, in the following terms:
“1219 Expenses of management of a company's investment business
In calculating the corporation tax to which a company with investment business is liable for an accounting period, expenses of management of the company's investment business which are referable to that period are allowed as a deduction from the company's total profits.
…
For the purposes of this section expenses of management are expenses of management of a company's investment business so far as –
they are in respect of so much of the company's investment business as consists of making investments, and
the investments concerned are not held for an unallowable purpose during the accounting period to which the expenses are referable.
But –
no deduction is allowed under this section for expenses of a capital nature, …”
There are special rules whereby certain items are treated as expenses of management (see section 1221 and Chapter 3 of Part 16) and rules restricting certain specified deductions are contained in Chapter 4 of Part 16. None of these special rules is relevant in this case.
The relief now contained in section 1219(1) of the 2009 Act was originally introduced by section 14 of the Finance Act 1915, later replaced by section 33 of the Income Tax Act 1918 and then by section 75 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 (“the Taxes Act 1988”). The relief was introduced to counter the unfairness suffered by some investment companies which were taxed by deduction on the income from their investments and could not bring the management expenses of earning such income into account in the same way as an ordinary trading company could do as part of the calculation of the profits on which they were taxable (see the explanation of Lord Wright to this effect in Simpson v Grange Trust Ltd [1935] AC 422, 425). It was also available to life assurance companies when taxed on their investment income rather than on their profits under Case I of Schedule D.
The capital exclusion in section 1219(3) of the 2009 Act was first introduced by section 38 of the Finance Act 2004 which substituted a new version of section 75 of the Taxes Act 1988 for the existing one, for accounting periods beginning on or after 1 April 2004. Section 75(3) as substituted provided that expenses of a capital nature are not expenses of management. This was subject to two exceptions, neither of which is relevant in this case.
The analogous rule relating to the exclusion of expenses of a capital nature in the calculation of profits for ordinary trading companies is now to be found in Chapter 4 of Part 3 of the 2009 Act which deals with “Trade profits: rules restricting deductions”. The relevant rule is in section 53(1) which provides:
“In calculating the profits of a trade, no deduction is allowed for items of a capital nature.”
The meaning of“expenses of management” as discussed in Sun Life and Camas
The courts have had to consider the scope of the relief for expenses of management within the meaning of section 1219 of the 2009 Act and its predecessor sections in several cases. Although there is no longer any dispute that section 1219(1) applies to the Disputed Expenditure, two of these cases are relevant to the arguments advanced by COHL about the proper interpretation of the exclusion for capital expenditure. They are Sun Life Assurance Society v Davidson (Inspector of Taxes) [1958] AC 184 (“Sun Life”) and Camas plc v Atkinson [2003] EWHC 1600 (Ch), [2003] STC 968 affd[2004] EWCA Civ 541, [2004] 1 WLR 2392 (“Camas”).
Sun Life concerned a life assurance business which claimed relief for brokerage fees and stamp duty paid on the purchase of certain investments. The deduction was claimed as an expense of management within the meaning of section 33 of the Income Tax Act 1918. Since section 33 contained no express exclusion for capital expenditure (like that now provided by section 1219(3)) the question of whether the expenditure was capital or revenue simply did not arise. Without reference to any revenue/capital distinction, all members of the House of Lords regarded the right to deduct as depending on the sums having been disbursed as expenses of management and not as anything else; the words “expenses of management” in section 33 were ordinary words with no technical or special meaning; and their application in any particular case was a question of broad evaluative judgement to determine on which side of the line they fell.
In his leading speech in the House of Lords, Viscount Simonds referred to the concession made by counsel for Sun Life that the price paid to purchase the investments themselves could not be expenses of management. COHL contend that Viscount Simonds’ speech demonstrates his view that the concession was wrongly made. However, a careful analysis of what Viscount Simonds said shows that this is not correct.
Sun Life carried on a trade (life assurance) and as part of the everyday conduct of that trade it bought and sold investments, which were revenue assets or circulating capital. Because the Revenue had elected to tax Sun Life on its investment income, and not as a trader on its trading profits under Schedule D Case I, it could not claim its trading or general expenses as a deduction. Viscount Simonds recognised that the words “expenses of management” were words of qualification and applied to some only of the trading or general expenses deductible under Schedule D Case I. However, Sun Life submitted that “expenses of management” included everything that would fall within trading or general expenses with the sole exception of the cost of purchase of investments. It is clear (from the passage at p 198) that Viscount Simonds did not agree with this submission. His reference to the illogicality in Sun Life’s submission is that, if expenses of management are said to be the same as trading or general expenses, it is illogical to exclude the costs of revenue assets. In other words, given the premise of Sun Life’s submission, the exclusion is illogical, for “theacquisition of the necessary stock in trade would appear to be a first expense of carrying on a business”. But significantly, as he made clear, Viscount Simonds did not accept the premise. Hence, in a case to which the expenses of management regime applies, he did not think that the concession was wrong. He went on to say:
“The concession is nevertheless of value, for, if the expense of purchasing an investment is not an expense of management, I can see no valid ground of distinction between the price of the stock which is purchased and the stamp duty paid upon contract or transfer and the brokerage paid to the broker. Each item is an integral part of the cost of acquisition or, as the commissioners put it, a part of the expenses of the particular purchase not of the expenses of management.” (p 198).
In other words, since it was conceded that the acquisition cost of the investments was not an expense of management, the question became one of which costs in addition to the actual purchase price comprised acquisition costs and so were not expenses of management and which costs were not to be treated as an “integral part” of the costs of acquisition and so could be deducted.