[2023] UKSC 44
On appeal from: [2021] EWCA Civ 1438
JUDGMENT
Commissioners for His Majesty's Revenue and Customs (Respondent) v Fisher and another (Appellants)
Commissioners for His Majesty's Revenue and Customs (Appellant) v Fisher (Respondent) No 2
before
Lord Reed, President
Lord Hodge, Deputy President
Lord Sales
Lord Stephens
Lady Rose
21 November 2023
Heard on 19 and 20 July 2023
Counsel - Fishers
Philip Baker KC
Rory Mullan KC
Imran S Afzal
(Instructed by Sharpe Pritchard LLP)
Counsel - HMRC
David Ewart KC
Brendan McGurk
Barbara Belgrano
Ben Elliott
Emilia Carslaw
(Instructed by HMRC Solicitors Office & Legal Services (Stratford))
LADY ROSE (with whom Lord Reed, Lord Hodge, Lord Sales and Lord Stephens agree):
(1)INTRODUCTION
The taxing provisions which are at the centre of this appeal have been the subject of litigation in the senior courts almost from the moment they were first introduced into the tax code by the Finance Act 1936. They have been amended over the decades and re-enacted in consolidating legislation. But they have continued to perplex and concern generations of judges faced with the task of construing them.
The basic idea behind the provisions is expressed in the tag given to them – the transfer of assets abroad code or TOAA. The paradigm case in which they impose a tax charge is where an individual resident in the United Kingdom transfers assets, for example, shares in a company or partnership, to a person overseas so that instead of that individual receiving and paying tax on income arising from the assets, such as dividends from those shares, the overseas company either retains the income or transfers it to the individual in the form of capital. The effect, broadly, of the provisions is that the income received by the overseas person is deemed to be the income of the individual who is then charged tax on it, whether or not he has actually received any of that income within the jurisdiction. An early case in which the provisions came before the House of Lords involved just such a paradigm sets of facts: Latilla v Inland Revenue Comrs [1943] AC 377, (1943) 25 TC 107. Their Lordships in that case were scathing in their dismissal of the arguments put forward by the taxpayers seeking to construe the provisions in a way which left their ingenious methods of avoiding tax intact. Viscount Simon LC in the first paragraph of his speech in Latilla said that:
“… one result of such methods, if they succeed, is, of course, to increase pro tanto the load of tax on the shoulders of the great body of good citizens who do not desire, or do not know how, to adopt these manoeuvres.”
Lord Greene MR made similar comments in Lord Howard de Walden v Inland Revenue Comrs [1942] 1 KB 389 (“Lord Howard de Walden”). In that case, the issue was whether the amount brought into tax for the UK resident individual was (a) limited to the income that he was in fact entitled to, or able to, enjoy or (b) comprised all the income of the overseas company to which the assets had been transferred or (c) comprised only the income of that overseas company which was traceable to the assets transferred. In concluding that it was the second, largest amount, Lord Greene MR said that section 18 of the Finance Act 1936 was a penal provision. He referred to the “battle of manoeuvre” waged between the legislature and tax avoiders whose skill, determination and resourcefulness had often worsted the legislature. He regarded the provisions as an attempt to put an end to the struggle by imposing the severest penalties: p 397.
The problems have arisen, however, when the circumstances of the taxpayer do not fall squarely within that paradigm case. It has not been clear who, apart from the Lord de Waldens of this world, is caught. A taxpayer who falls within the provisions can be charged to tax on a substantial amount of income that they have not actually received and which bears no relation to the value of the assets initially transferred. In the later cases, the judicial criticism has focused not on the taxpayers but on the legislation itself or on the Commissioners’ expansive interpretation of that legislation. Not every judge has endorsed Walton J’s description of the Solicitor-General’s role as like that of Count Dracula when putting forward a construction of the legislation which, the judge thought, contradicted the most rudimentary notions of justice and fair play (Vestey v Inland Revenue Comrs (No 2) [1979] Ch 198, 215). But many judges have used strong words to deprecate different elements of the taxing provisions and how the Commissioners have sought to enforce them.
The appeals of the members of the Fisher family with which the court is now concerned have highlighted again the potential breadth of the TOAA code’s application and the difficulty of working out how it is intended to apply. The appeal at every stage of the proceedings has raised many difficult issues about the meaning of the code which was set out in sections 739 to 746 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 (“ICTA 1988”). The key question, however, arises from the fact that the transaction which HMRC identify as being the transfer of assets triggering the application of the code was the sale of a business operated by a UK incorporated company, the shares of which were owned by the Fishers, to a company incorporated in Gibraltar which the Fishers also owned. The provisions only apply to impose a tax charge on individuals and it has been common ground throughout that “individuals” means natural persons and not bodies corporate. None of the Fishers held a majority interest in either the transferor or the transferee company. Does that mean that the Fishers cannot be caught by the code at all?
I have concluded that the Fishers are not caught by the taxing charge on which HMRC have relied in issuing their assessments to tax. In light of that, this judgment focuses on that issue and does not need to explore the many other issues on which we received helpful submissions and with which the tribunals and court below grappled.
(2)THE LEGISLATION
The provision under which the Fishers have been charged to tax is section 739 ICTA 1988 (as amended). The tax years to which the assessments under appeal relate are 2000/2001 to 2007/2008. The rewritten version of the code set out in the Income Tax Act 2007 applies to the final year of assessment at issue. It is agreed, however, that any differences do not affect the issues in this case and the parties have addressed the case on the basis of the version of the provisions as they stood between March 1997 and April 2007.
First, there is section 739 which is the primary charging section with which we are concerned. The relevant provisions are:
Subject to section 747(4)(b), the following provisions of this section shall have effect for the purpose of preventing the avoiding by individuals ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom of liability to income tax by means of transfers of assets by virtue or in consequence of which, either alone or in conjunction with associated operations, income becomes payable to persons resident or domiciled outside the United Kingdom.
(1A) Nothing in subsection (1) above shall be taken to imply that the provisions of subsections (2) and (3) apply only if—
the individual in question was ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom at the time when the transfer was made; or
the avoiding of liability to income tax is the purpose, or one of the purposes, for which the transfer was effected.
Where by virtue or in consequence of any such transfer, either alone or in conjunction with associated operations, such an individual has, within the meaning of this section, power to enjoy, whether forthwith or in the future, any income of a person resident or domiciled outside the United Kingdom which, if it were income of that individual received by him in the United Kingdom, would be chargeable to income tax by deduction or otherwise, that income shall, whether it would or would not have been chargeable to income tax apart from the provisions of this section, be deemed to be income of that individual for all purposes of the Income Tax Acts.
Where, whether before or after any such transfer, such an individual receives or is entitled to receive any capital sum the payment of which is in any way connected with the transfer or any associated operation, any income which, by virtue or in consequence of the transfer, either alone or in conjunction with associated operations, has become the income of a person resident or domiciled outside the United Kingdom shall, whether it would or would not have been chargeable to income tax apart from the provisions of this section, be deemed to be income of that individual for all purposes of the Income Tax Acts.”
“739 Prevention of avoidance of income tax
Some commentary on that provision is helpful at this point. Subsection (1) broadly reproduces what started out as a preamble to section 18 of the Finance Act 1936, setting out the purpose of the provision before subsections (1) to (7) of section 18. It was re-enacted as a preamble rather than as a subsection in later versions of the code until it was made the first subsection of section 739 ICTA 1988. It sets out the tax avoidance purpose of the charging provision.
An important issue in this appeal and in previous cases is:
what does subsection (1) mean by specifying that the tax avoidance by individuals is “by means of transfers of assets”; and
how does that affect the requirement in the charging provision in subsection (2) that “such an individual” has power to enjoy the income of the overseas person. How much of the description of the individual in subsection (1) is imported into subsection (2) by the word “such” – is it just that the individual is ordinarily resident in the UK or is it also that he or she transferred the assets overseas?
Subsection (2) deals with the charge to income tax where the individual has power to enjoy the income of the non-resident person. That is the charging provision which is said to apply to the Fishers. Subsection (3) covers the situation where the individual receives a capital sum connected with the transfer rather than having a power to enjoy the income of the overseas person. In both circumstances the effect of the provision is that the income of the non-resident person “shall be deemed to be the income of the individual” for income tax purposes.
What is meant by the “power to enjoy” is set out in section 742. This provision is both broad and complex and includes where:
“the receipt or accrual of the income operates to increase the value to the individual of any assets held by him or for his benefit”: (section 742(2)(b)); or
“the individual is able in any manner whatsoever, and whether directly or indirectly, to control the application of the income”: (section 742(2)(e)).
Section 740 deals with the liability of non-transferors:
This section has effect where—
by virtue or in consequence of a transfer of assets, either alone or in conjunction with associated operations, income becomes payable to a person resident or domiciled outside the United Kingdom; and
an individual ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom who is not liable to tax under section 739 by reference to the transfer receives a benefit provided out of assets which are available for the purpose by virtue or in consequence of the transfer or of any associated operations.
Subject to the provisions of this section, the amount or value of any such benefit as is mentioned in subsection (1) above, if not otherwise chargeable to income tax in the hands of the recipient, shall
to the extent to which it falls within the amount of relevant income of years of assessment up to and including the year of assessment in which the benefit is received, be treated for all the purposes of the Income Tax Acts as the income of the individual for that year;
to the extent to which it is not by virtue of this subsection treated as his income for that year and falls within the amount of relevant income of the next following year of assessment, be treated for those purposes as his income for the next following year,
and so on for subsequent years, taking the reference in paragraph (b) to the year mentioned in paragraph (a) as a reference to that and any other year before the subsequent year in question.”
“740.— Liability of non-transferors
One can immediately see that section 740 has some important features. The first is that it only applies if the individual is not liable to tax under section 739. Another key difference between the liability of the individual who falls within section 739(2) and the individual who falls within section 740(1)(b) is that the latter must receive a benefit provided out of assets by virtue or in consequence of the transfer. Where such a benefit is received by the individual falling within section 740(1)(b), then, according to section 740(2), it is that benefit which is treated as the income of the individual for the relevant tax year. This contrasts with the position under section 739(2) where the individual need only have a “power to enjoy” the income of the overseas person and can be subject to the tax charge even if they do not actually receive any money from the overseas person during the course of the tax year. Section 740 is not the charging provision relied on in these appeals but its presence in the TOAA code is relied on by the Fishers as indicating that section 739 is only intended to apply to transferors of assets.
Section 742 contains some definitional provisions common to both sections 739 and 740. Subsection (9) provides:
For the purposes of sections 739 to 741—
a reference to an individual shall be deemed to include the wife or husband of the individual;
‘assets’ includes property or rights of any kind and ‘transfer’, in relation to rights, includes the creation of those rights;
‘benefit’ includes a payment of any kind.”
The deeming provision in section 742(9)(a) was included in the earlier versions of the code and has been referred to in the cases as “the spousal extension”. Although it is not directly relied on by HMRC in the case of the Fishers, it has been regarded as indicating that the charging provisions have a more limited scope than that for which HMRC contend.
Then comes section 741 which provides an exemption from the charge in sections 739 and 740 where tax avoidance was not a purpose behind the transfer of assets or where the transfer was a bona fide commercial transaction and not designed for the purpose of tax avoidance. I shall refer to this exemption as the “motive defence”. Section 741, in the version which applies to transactions taking place before 5 December 2005 and hence which is relevant for this appeal, provides:
that the purpose of avoiding liability to taxation was not the purpose or one of the purposes for which the transfer or associated operations or any of them were effected; or
that the transfer and any associated operations were bona fide commercial transactions and were not designed for the purpose of avoiding liability to taxation.
The jurisdiction of the Special Commissioners on any appeal shall include jurisdiction to review any relevant decision taken by the Board in exercise of their functions under this section.”
“741 Exemption from sections 739 and 740
Sections 739 and 740 shall not apply if the individual shows in writing or otherwise to the satisfaction of the Board either—
This version of section 741 has been superseded by section 741A which was inserted by the Finance Act 2006 and which applies to transfers and associated operations occurring on or after 5 December 2005. Section 741A could still be described as a motive defence but is rather more elaborate than section 741. Since the transfer of the SJA business occurred before 5 December 2005, it is the older section 741 which applies even in relation to tax assessment years after that date.
Finally for our purposes, section 744 provides for what is to happen if more than one individual is liable to be taxed on the same income of the overseas person:
No amount of income shall be taken into account more than once in charging tax under the provisions of sections 739 and 740; and where there is a choice as to the persons in relation to whom any amount of income can be so taken into account—
it shall be so taken into account in relation to such of them, and if more than one in such proportions respectively, as appears to the Board to be just and reasonable; and
the jurisdiction of the Special Commissioners on any appeal against an assessment charging tax under those provisions shall include jurisdiction to review any relevant decision taken by the Board under this subsection.”
“744.— No duplication of charge
Again, although there is no issue about the application of section 744 in this appeal, its presence in the TOAA code is relied on, this time by HMRC, as relevant to the proper construction of the scope of section 739.
(3)THE FACTS, THE PROCEEDINGS BELOW AND THE ISSUES FOR THIS COURT
Anne and Stephen Fisher are the parents of Peter and Dianne Fisher. The betting business at the centre of this dispute was consolidated in 1988 in a company, Stan James (Abingdon) Limited (“SJA”). That company was resident in the United Kingdom and, as from 1988, the shares were held by the four Fishers. They were the only directors of the company. As the FTT found, the betting business operated by the Fishers was one of the first to recognise and exploit the possibilities of the fast developing market for “telebetting”, that is the placing of bets by telephone. Before that, the bets were all placed by customers in the betting shops in the UK.
Once the bet can be placed by someone who is not present in the shop, the possibility that the customer can place a bet by telephone from another jurisdiction arises. The differences between betting duties in this jurisdiction and in the jurisdiction where the bet is taken then become an important consideration. Under the Betting and Gaming Duties Act 1981, bookmakers have to account for betting duty on bets placed by customers. In 1999, UK betting duty was charged at a rate of 6.75% on the amount staked. In Gibraltar betting duty was only 1%. It was legally possible under the regime for a bet to be placed overseas, so for a bookmaker in Gibraltar to take a bet from a customer in the UK and for the bet to be placed in Gibraltar. In such a case, there would be no liability for UK betting duty on that bet. But the statutory regime prohibited overseas bookmakers from advertising in the UK and prohibited also the sharing of resources between an overseas bookmaker and an entity in the UK in order to take the bet: see the discussion of this provision in Victor Chandler International Ltd v Customs and Excise Comrs [2000] 1 WLR 1296, para 7.
Initially the Fishers set up a branch of SJA in Gibraltar. SJA’s Gibraltarian betting licence became operational from 1 April 1998. The branch had computers, software and telephone systems and took bets from non-UK customers over the telephone. Once the branch started taking UK bets by telephone, there was a significant change in the scale of its business. The branch went from having six members of staff to having over 20. More telephone lines and computers had to be installed. On 22 July 1999, a new company, incorporated in Gibraltar, was set up called Stan James Gibraltar Limited (“SJG”). Between August 1999 and February 2000, arrangements were put in place to transfer the whole of SJA’s telebetting operation and its other activities (apart from shops) to SJG. The agreement giving effect to this transfer from SJA to SJG, at an independently assessed valuation, took effect as from 29 February 2000. It was signed by Stephen Fisher as duly authorised director on behalf of SJA and by Peter Fisher as duly authorised director of SJG. The business sold included the telebetting operation located in the UK at SJA’s Abingdon premises and at the Gibraltarian branch. At the time of the transfer, the shareholdings in SJG were 24% each held by Peter and Dianne and 26% each by Stephen and Anne. Their shares all carried equal rights. The shareholdings in SJA at the time of the transfer were 12% to Dianne and Peter Fisher and 38% each to Anne and Stephen Fisher.