[2023] UKSC 7
On appeal from: [2021] EWCA Civ 91
JUDGMENT
News Corp UK & Ireland Ltd (Appellant) v Commissioners for His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (Respondent)
before
Lord Hodge, Deputy President
Lord Kitchin
Lord Hamblen
Lord Leggatt
Lord Burrows
22 February 2023
Heard on 22 and 23 November 2022
Appellant
Jonathan Peacock KC
Edward Brown KC
Edward Hellier
(Instructed by Deloitte LLP (London))
Respondent
Eleni Mitrophanous KC
Stephen Donnelly
(Instructed by HMRC Solicitor’s Office (Salford))
LORD HAMBLEN AND LORD BURROWS (with whom Lord Hodge and Lord Kitchin agree):
1.Introduction
Under the Value Added Tax Act 1994 (the “VAT Act”), Value Added Tax (“VAT”) is not charged on newspapers. In the language of section 30 of the VAT Act, newspapers are “zero-rated”. The central question in this case is, in the specified period of 30 August 2010 – 4 December 2016, whether that zero-rating extended beyond print newspapers to what we shall refer to as “digital editions” of newspapers (ie editions for e-readers, tablets, smartphones and websites).
At a high level of generality, the answer to that question requires the application of principles of legislative interpretation and EU law that may be said to be pulling in different directions. On the one hand, there is the “always speaking” principle (of domestic statutory interpretation) which may be thought to support a wide interpretation. On the other hand, there is the EU law requirement to interpret exemptions from VAT strictly and to give effect to a “standstill” provision.
It is common ground that the decision in relation to the period in question will also be applicable to the period up to 1 May 2020. However, as from 1 May 2020, there can be no dispute because by reason of the VAT (Extension of Zero-Rating to Electronically Supplied Books etc) (Coronavirus) Order 2020, (SI No 2020/459) (the “2020 Order”), zero-rating has been “extended” to newspapers “when supplied electronically” (unless wholly or predominantly devoted to advertising or consisting wholly or predominantly of audio or video content). In other words, it is clear that, unless falling within the exception, digital editions of newspapers are zero-rated as from 1 May 2020.
Jonathan Peacock KC, counsel for News Corp UK & Ireland Ltd (“News Corp”), described this case as providing a classic example of where an “always speaking” interpretation is appropriate. This is because the facts concern a technological development (from printed newspapers to digital editions of newspapers) where the underlying purpose behind the VAT zero-rating carries through to the new development. This is an attractive submission not least because of its rational simplicity. But there are also powerful arguments to the contrary.
News Corp’s central claim was rejected by the First Tier Tribunal (“FTT”): [2018] UKFTT 129 TC, accepted on appeal by the Upper Tribunal (“UT”): [2019] UKUT 404 (TCC), but rejected again by the Court of Appeal: [2021] EWCA Civ 91. News Corp now appeals to the Supreme Court.
In answering the central question, the parties were in agreement that one should initially put to one side the relevance, if any, of the EU principle of fiscal neutrality. This principle was essentially relied on by Mr Peacock as a fall-back position in the event of the court rejecting his central submissions. In line with this, we shall leave consideration of the principle of fiscal neutrality to the end of this judgment.
It is common ground between the parties that the withdrawal of the UK from the European Union (“EU”) has no impact at all on the issues in this case. While the UK was part of the EU, VAT was governed by EU Directives and those Directives were implemented in the UK by domestic statutes, in particular by the VAT Act. By reason of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 and the European Union (Withdrawal Agreement) Act 2020, the relevant EU law and EU derived domestic legislation is “retained EU law” after the implementation completion day (31 December 2020) but, in any event, the period with which this case is concerned expired before the implementation completion date.
2.The factual background
The newspapers in question are The Times, The Sunday Times, The Sun and The Sun on Sunday. In the relevant period, the relevant digital editions of The Times and Sunday Times were available in an e-reader edition, a tablet edition, a smartphone edition and a website edition; and The Sun and The Sun on Sunday were available on The Sun classic app and, as introduced in 2013, The Sun+ package.
The e-reader editionwas an exact facsimile of the newsprint edition and could be downloaded on a daily basis onto a tablet computer or viewed on a personal computer. The tablet edition could be downloaded on a daily basis onto a tablet computer and then read off-line. The smartphone edition could be downloaded on a daily basis onto a smartphone and then read off-line. The website edition could be viewed at on any internet browser. The Sun classic appconsisted of a digital replica of each print edition of The Sun each day available for use on tablets but allowed customers to skip between sections using the contents page. The Sun+ packagewas a bundle including entitlement to viewThe Sun website which was behind a paywall at the time, and access to The Sun+ goals appshowing Premier League football goals and allowing subscribers to take advantage of certain perks such as free cinema tickets.
The Sun+ was not successful and was withdrawn in November 2015 at the same time as the paywall to the website was removed. During the period that The Sun+ was available The Sun website edition closely mirrored the content and structure of the print edition.
The FTT found - and by the time this case reached the Court of Appeal these findings were not challenged by HMRC - that the digital editions of The Times, The Sunday Times and The Sun on Sunday had "similar characteristics to those of the newsprint editions" (at para 150). The digital editions were essentially periodic-based publications (at para 152) and the “content of the digital and newsprint editions was ... fundamentally the same or very similar" (para 153). The "digital editions were essentially, when the evidence was viewed in the round, the same as or very similar to the newsprint editions"(para 155); and readers considered them "to be fundamentally the same as the newsprint editions"(para 156).
Although the digital editions did provide some additional features to those in the print editions (such as videos, interactive puzzles, links to podcasts, access to Scottish and Irish sections and the ability to store articles in a “my articles” section and to share articles via social media) (para 105), these additional features were "relatively lightly used"(paras 65 and 105) and were “a relatively minor aspect of those digital editions"(para 155). Some of the digital editions could update their content, had search functions, and provided access to archived material and links to additional content (see, eg, paras 38, 68, 72, and 107). From the point of view of the subscriber , it was more "the content than the medium of its delivery to which most value was attached, although subscribers also valued the additional convenience of the digital platform" (para 156).
As found by the FTT (para 17) the social policy behind the decision to zero-rate newspapers was the promotion of literacy, the dissemination of knowledge and democratic accountability by having informed public debate.
3.EU and domestic legislation
Between 1940 and 1973 the UK levied an indirect tax on the wholesale price of goods called Purchase Tax. Certain items were exempt from Purchase Tax, including newspapers. Following the UK’s accession to the European Economic Community (“EEC”) on 1 January 1973, Purchase Tax was replaced by VAT with effect from 1 April 1973.
VAT in general applies to the supplies of all goods and services at the standard rate, though the EU has specified that certain supplies shall be exempt from VAT (“EU mandated exemptions”). The EU has also under specified conditions permitted member states to continue to exempt certain supplies that are taxable under EU law, to maintain zero rates for supplies that are taxable under EU law, and to apply a reduced rate.
A member state's ability to apply a reduced or zero rate to certain supplies originated in Directive 67/228 (“the Second Council Directive”) which stated in the last indent of article 17 that member states were permitted, on what was described as a transitional basis, to "provide for reduced rates or even exemptions with refund [ie zero rates]”. Such measures were only authorised where they were “taken for clearly defined social reasons and for the benefit of the final consumer” (“the cumulative conditions”). These conditions were imposed in light of the general aim of harmonisation of VAT and the fact that, as stated in the fifth recital, “the introduction of zero rates gives rise to difficulties, so that it is highly desirable to limit strictly the number of exemptions”.
In anticipation of joining the EEC, the UK took advantage of the authorisation conferred by article 17 of the Second Directive to preserve the tax-free treatment of newspapers by enacting section 12 of the Finance Act 1972 (“the 1972 Act”). It did so in the knowledge that the authorisation was intended to be on a transitional basis but, in circumstances where the cumulative conditions were met, it wished to preserve the status quo in relation to the taxation of newspapers. Section 12 of the 1972 Act accordingly provided for the zero-rating of supplies listed in Group 3 of Schedule 4 to the Act. The supplies listed as Item 2 of Group 3 were “Newspapers, journals and periodicals” (“Item 2”). Zero rates are termed under EU law “exemptions with refunds”.
In May 1977 Directive 77/388 ("the Sixth VAT Directive")was adopted. Article 28(2) of that Directive provided:
Reduced rates and exemptions with refund of the tax paid at the preceding stage [ie zero rates] which are in force on 31 December 1975, and which satisfy the conditions stated in the last indent of Article 17 of the second Council Directive of 11 April 1967, may be maintained until a date which shall be fixed by the Council...
On the basis of a report from the Commission, the Council shall review the abovementioned reduced rates and exemptions every five years and, acting unanimously on a proposal from the Commission, shall where appropriate, adopt the measures required to ensure the progressive abolition thereof".
The position following the enactment of the Sixth VAT Directive was therefore that member states were permitted to continue to apply certain zero rates that were in force prior to 31 December 1975 provided that the cumulative conditions were met. No provision was made, however, permitting new zero rates to be adopted by member states, even if the cumulative conditions were met. Thus, in effect only zero rates in force prior to 31 December 1975 were permitted. Article 28 of the Sixth VAT Directive was referred to as a “standstill” provision by the Court of Justice of the European Union (“the CJEU”) in Talacre Beach Caravan Sales Ltd v Customs and Excise Commissioners (“Talacre Beach”) Case C-251/05, [2006] STC 1671 at para 22. As the zero-rating of newspapers was still in force on 31 December 1975, the UK could continue to maintain that zero rate after the enactment of the Sixth VAT Directive. Article 28(2) was amended by Directive 92/77 of 19 October 1992 so as to permit zero rates that were “in force on 1 January 1991” to be maintained but only if they “are in accordance with Community law”.
The UK zero rate for newspapers was preserved in the Value Added Tax Act 1983 and in the VAT Act, which came into force on 1 September 1994 and is the governing Act for the claims in this case. Group 3 of Schedule 8 of the VAT Act provides:
Books, booklets, brochures, pamphlets and leaflets.
Newspapers, journals and periodicals.
Children's picture books and painting books.
Music (printed, duplicated or manuscript).
Maps, charts and topographical plans.
Covers, cases and other articles supplied with items 1 to 5 and not separately accounted for.
Notes
Items 1 to 6—
(a) do not include plans or drawings for industrial, architectural, engineering, commercial or similar purposes; but
(b) include the supply of the services described in paragraph 1(1) of Schedule 4 in respect of goods comprised in the items.
Items 1 to 6 do not include goods in circumstances where—
(a) the supply of the goods is connected with a supply of services, and
(b) those connected supplies are made by different suppliers.
For the purposes of Note (2) a supply of goods is connected with a supply of services if, had those two supplies been made by a single supplier—
(a) they would have been treated as a single supply of services, and
(b) that single supply would have been a taxable supply (other than a zero-rated supply) or an exempt supply.”
"Group 3—Books, etc
Item No
Items 1 to 6 have been stated in the same terms since the 1972 Act. That Act included a Note in materially the same terms as Note (1)(a). Note (1)(b) was added in the Value Added Tax Act 1983. The other Notes were added in the VAT Act.
The Sixth VAT Directive was repealed in 2006 and replaced by Directive 2006/112 (which has been referred to in the courts below, and in the submissions to this court, as the “Principal VAT Directive”: we shall continue to refer to it in this way). Article 110 of the Principal VAT Directive (which reflected the amended terms of article 28(2) of the Sixth VAT Directive) provided as follows in relation to zero rates:
"Member States which, at 1 January 1991, were granting exemptions with deductibility of the VAT paid at the preceding stage [ie zero rates] or applying reduced rates lower than the minimum laid down in Article 99 may continue to grant those exemptions or apply those reduced rates.
The exemptions and reduced rates referred to in the first paragraph must be in accordance with Community law and must have been adopted for clearly defined social reasons and for the benefit of the final consumer"
Article 110 required that zero-rating was still being granted on 1 January 1991 for it to be continued but it is common ground for the purpose of this appeal that the relevant “standstill” date for the UK remained 31 December 1975 (ie as under the Sixth VAT Directive). This is because a category of supply which was not zero-rated on 31 December 1975 could not later become zero-rated.
Article 98 of the Principal Directive provided that reduced rates “shall not apply to electronically supplied services” but that reduced rates could be applied to goods and services set out in Annex III. That Annex included: "(6) supply, including on loan by libraries, of books on all physical means of support (including brochures, leaflets and similar printed matter, children's picture, drawing or colouring books, music printed or in manuscript form, maps and hydrographic or similar charts), newspapers and periodicals, other than material wholly or predominantly devoted to advertising". The words "on all physical means of support"were added by Directive 2009/47 effective from 1 June 2009. Article 98 and point 6 of Annex III apply to printed books, books on CDs, CD-ROMs and USB keys but not to electronically supplied books – see Case C- 219/13 K Oy [2015] STC 433 para 34. An argument that electronically supplied books should also fall within this provision, because reading electronically supplied books required physical support (such as a computer), was rejected on the basis that such support was not included in the supply – see European Commission v Luxembourg Case C-502/13, [2015] STC 1714, para 36. Article 7 of Council Implementing Regulation (EU) No 282/2011 of 15 March 2011 laying down implementing measures for the Principal VAT Directive expressly stated that “electronically supplied services” (which were excluded from the reduced VAT rates) included “the digitised content of books and other electronic publications”, “subscription to online newspapers and journals”, and “online news, traffic information and weather reports”.
In 2018 under Directive 2018/1713 member states were allowed to apply a reduced VAT rate to the supply of books, newspapers and periodicals irrespective of whether they are supplied on physical means of support or electronically; and member states then applying zero rates to books, newspapers or periodicals supplied on physical means of support were allowed to apply the same VAT treatment to such books, newspapers or periodicals when supplied electronically. It was pursuant to this Directive that zero-rating was extended to newspapers “when supplied electronically” under the 2020 Order (see para 3 above). The Explanatory Memorandum to the 2020 Order at para 6.2 says the following:
“This instrument amends Group 3 to extend the zero-rating of some of the publications listed in that Group to electronically supplied versions of those publications. The European Union (EU) vires for these changes are contained in Council Directive (EU) 2018/1713 which made changes to the scope of the EU’s optional reduced rate provisions. This Directive came into force in December 2018. Where member States (including the UK during the Transition Period) have a reduced rate (or an equivalent zero rate) for supplies of printed publications, it allows them to extend that reduced or zero rate to supplies of electronic versions of those publications subject to certain exclusions. The UK has decided to exercise this option to extend its zero rate to supplies of some electronic publications.”
4.Summary of the decisions below
(1)FTT
Judge Guy Brannan, sitting as the judge in the FTT, [2018] UKFTT 129 (TC), dismissed the appeals of News Corp against the decisions of HMRC that the digital editions of The Times, The Sunday Times, The Sun and The Sun on Sunday did not fall within Item 2 of the VAT Act and were therefore not zero-rated for VAT purposes. Having made the findings of fact summarised at paras 8-13 above, the judge’s essential reasoning was as follows:
Item 2 of the VAT Act deals only with the supply of goods and not the supply of services. As it was common ground that the digital editions constitute the supply of services, this was “fatal” to News Corp’s argument (para 181).
The always speaking principle of statutory interpretation is here overridden by the need to construe exemptions from VAT strictly; and by the application of a “standstill” provision which means that the exemptions are narrowly confined to, and cannot be extended beyond, their 1991 limits applying article 110 of the Principal VAT Directive. “It is clear that the provisions of Item 2 … should be construed strictly and that this therefore … prohibits the application of the ‘always speaking’ doctrine to extend the scope of zero rating to apply to digital editions of the titles” (para 198). “[There is a] need to give Item 2 … a meaning which is ‘frozen’ as at 1991 in order to prevent an impermissible extension of zero-rating…” (para 202).
The strict interpretation of Item 2 and the freezing effect of the standstill provision are supported by the decision of the CJEU in Talacre Beach (para 194). There it was held that the zero-rating for caravans did not extend to the contents of caravans supplied with them.
Applying a different VAT treatment to the digital editions from that applicable to the print editions does not offend against the principle of fiscal neutrality. There was no disparity of treatment as at 1991 because digital editions, which constitute a supply of services, did not then exist; and thereafter the standstill meant that there could be no enlargement of the scope of Item 2 or extension beyond the boundary set out by that provision.
(2)UT
The UT, Zacaroli J and Judge Greg Sinfield, [2019] UKUT 404 (TCC), allowed News Corp’s appeal against the decision of the FTT. The essential reasoning of the UT was as follows:
It was incorrect to say that the always speaking doctrine could not here apply. It was not displaced by the need to apply a strict interpretation of exemptions (paras 45 and 89).
The always speaking doctrine is also not precluded by the imposing of a standstill by article 110 of the Principal VAT Directive. The standstill is consistent with treating digital newspapers as zero-rated because that does not involve extending the category of zero-rated items (paras 51 and 90).
Talacre Beach was significantly different from the position in this case. That was concerned with provisions of UK domestic law which zero-rated caravans but excluded from zero-rating the contents of the caravans. The taxpayer was arguing that, as the sale of a caravan and its contents constituted a single supply, the contents of the caravan should fall within the zero-rating for caravans. The CJEU rejected that argument. But that case was different because a conclusion that the contents were to be zero-rated would necessarily have involved an extension beyond the explicit exclusion laid down in the domestic legislation and therefore fell foul of article 110 (paras 46-52).
Harrier LLC v HMRC [2011] UKFTT 725 (TC) offered some, albeit limited, support for News Corp’s submissions. In that case it was accepted that books in Item 1 of Group 3 of Schedule 8 extended to photo-books, which were the product of technological advances in printing which could not have been conceived of in 1991 (para 53).
Section 30 VATA authorises zero-rating in respect of both goods and services. This demonstrated that the characterisation of a particular item as “goods” or “services” was not what mattered (para 60).
The distinction drawn in EU law between printed matter, such as printed books and newspapers, and electronically supplied services (see, eg, European Commission v Luxembourg), had no relevance to the position in the UK because that distinction was being applied in respect of VAT reduced-rating not zero- rating (paras 92-98).
Given the above reasoning and that one can describe digital newspapers as newspapers - because they share the essential characteristics of being edition-based and containing curated news - and, given that the legislative purpose is furthered by exempting digital newspapers just as much as printed newspapers, Item 2 should be interpreted as including digital newspapers (paras 86-91).
In the light of the above conclusion, it was unnecessary to say anything about fiscal neutrality.