[2023] UKSC 35
On appeal from: [2021] EWCA Civ 1043
JUDGMENT
Target Group Ltd (Appellant) v Commissioners for His Majesty's Revenue and Customs (Respondent)
before
Lord Reed, President
Lord Lloyd-Jones
Lord Sales
Lord Hamblen
Lady Rose
11 October 2023
Heard on 12 and 13 July 2023
Appellant
Roderick Cordara KC
(Instructed by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (Embankment))
Respondent
Hui Ling McCarthy KC
Michael Ripley
(Instructed by HMRC Solicitor’s Office (Stratford))
LORD HAMBLEN (with whom Lord Reed, Lord Lloyd-Jones, Lord Sales and Lady Rose agree):
1 Introduction
Value Added Tax (‘VAT’) is paid on all services supplied for consideration by a taxable person and its application is governed by Council Directive 2006/112/EC (the ‘Principal VAT Directive’ or ‘PVD’). The PVD exempts specified supplies from VAT and under article 135(1)(d) this includes various financial transactions. The issue on this appeal is whether loan administration services provided by the appellant (‘Target’) fall within that exemption.
Shawbrook Bank Limited (‘Shawbrook’) is a provider of mortgages and loans. Target administers loans made by Shawbrook, including by operating individual loan accounts and instigating and processing payments due from borrowers.
The article 135(1)(d) exemption applies to “transactions, … concerning …payments, transfers, debts, … but excluding debt collection”. Target contends that the services it provides fall within this provision and so are exempt from VAT. In particular, it relies on the fact that it procures payments from borrowers’ bank accounts to Shawbrook’s bank accounts by giving instructions for payment which are then automatically and inevitably carried out through the BACS system (BACS is the acronym for Bankers’ Automated Clearing System).
The respondent (‘HMRC’) contends that the exemption does not apply because the case law of the Court of Justice of the European Union (‘CJEU’) makes it clear that the exemption only applies to the execution of an order for transfer or payment and giving instructions for payment is a prior step to execution rather than part of the process of execution. The Court of Appeal (and the Upper Tribunal) upheld HMRC’s case and Target now appeals against that decision.
2 The legislative framework
Article 135(1) of the PVD lists a series of transactions which are exempt from VAT. These include:
the granting and the negotiation of credit and the management of credit by the person granting it;
…
transactions, including negotiation, concerning deposit and current accounts, payments, transfers, debts, cheques and other negotiable instruments, but excluding debt collection; …”
“…
Prior to the PVD coming into force, the two exemptions above were in article 13B(d)(1) and (3) respectively of the Sixth Directive (77/388/EEC). Since 1 January 1991, the exemption for “management of credit” has been restricted to management undertaken by the grantor only.
These exemptions are reflected in national law by Items 1, 2, 2A and 8 of Group 5 of Schedule 9 to Value Added Tax Act 1994. Nothing in this appeal turns on the precise wording of the UK statute.
The interpretation of the PVD is a matter of EU law, as retained pursuant to sections 2, 5(2) and 6 of European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018.
3 The factual background
In their decisions the First Tier Tribunal (‘FTT’) made findings about the services provided by Target to Shawbrook at paras 29 to 57 which were summarised by the Upper Tribunal (‘UT’) at paras 18 to 23 as follows:
The loan accounts maintained by Target are the sole record of the financial relationship between Shawbrook and its borrowers. They are effectively ledgers which evidence the level of indebtedness, capture repayments and record other financial information including fees and interest charged. Target credits and debits the loan accounts with all relevant amounts (payments, fees and interest etc).
Target operates bank accounts on behalf of Shawbrook. Target is responsible for matching payments to individual loan accounts and identifying missing payments. The vast majority of payments are made by direct debit. Target is responsible for generating the instructions for direct debit payments, in the form of a BACS file produced by Target’s systems which contains electronic payment instructions to banks operating the borrowers’ bank accounts, which BACS processes automatically. Target also accepts payments otherwise than by direct debit, eg by debit card payments and cheques.
As well as regular payments, Target processes irregular payments, for example where a borrower is in arrears and is seeking to pay amounts towards clearing the arrears, makes an overpayment or is paying off a loan early. Target reconciles and credits the payments to the loan accounts. Target has authority to transfer funds paid by borrowers into an incorrect account to the correct account. It uses both the BACS and CHAPS payment systems, which process instructions issued by Target (on behalf of Shawbrook), to move funds between Shawbrook’s bank accounts where required, or to repay sums to the borrower where an overpayment has been made.
Target is also responsible for calculating the amounts of interest and principal repayments due, and for calculating and applying any fees. Where Shawbrook makes an additional advance to a borrower, Target follows the same processes as for a new loan with the new outstanding loan amount replacing the previous balance. Where a borrower wishes to repay a loan early, Target is responsible for providing an early settlement quote. It also handles the entire process for any loan repayment, including discharge of security (using Shawbrook’s approved panel of solicitors) and closure of the account.
Target also deals with missed payments and arrears. For any default, a letter is produced in Shawbrook’s name providing formal notification to the borrower and advising them of the fee that will be applied. Target is provided with a certain level of authority by Shawbrook to negotiate how missed payments will be made up, with any longer-term forbearance being referred to Shawbrook. Any changes to the terms of a loan, eg an extension to the loan period, are also a matter for Shawbrook. If an account remains in arrears, the decision whether to take legal action or write off a loan is solely a matter for Shawbrook. If Shawbrook decides to take legal action, Target will work with a firm of solicitors on a Shawbrook approved panel, providing information, keeping records and continuing to handle contacts with the borrower.
Target also deals with any overpayments. Generally, borrowers can overpay a certain percentage of the balance, eg 10%, in any year without incurring an early repayment charge. Target amends the loan balance and term as appropriate and issues a letter confirming the overpayment. Alternatively, borrowers may be eligible for a refund if they overpay which Target will process. As mentioned above at [13], Target has authority to process refunds of less than £300 without reference to Shawbrook.”
4 The Issues
The principal issue on this appeal is whether Target carried out “transactions…concerning” “payments” and/or “transfers” and/or “debts” within the meaning of article 135(1)(d).
Target contends that it did so on two bases:
By giving instructions which automatically and inevitably resulted in payment from the borrowers’ bank accounts to Shawbrook’s bank accounts via BACS (‘the payments/transfers issue’); and/or
By the inputting of entries into the borrowers’ loan accounts with Shawbrook (‘the loan accounts issue’).
If Target succeeds in its appeal on this principal issue a further issue arises, namely whether its services are nevertheless excluded from exemption because they comprise a single composite supply which amounts to “debt collection” (the exclusion from the exemption under article 135(1)(d)) and/or “the management of credit” by a person other than the person granting it (ie Shawbrook), a supply which is specifically not exempted under article 135(1)(b).
5 The decisions below
The FTT (Judge Sarah Falk) promulgated its decision on 20 April 2018 [2018] UKFTT 226 (TC). Before the FTT HMRC put Target to proof that its supply fell to be treated as transactions concerning payments or transfers, but did not positively dispute this. Their primary case was that the supply was excluded as being debt collection. The FTT found that Target’s supply included transactions concerning payments or transfers within article 135(1)(d) but that the predominant nature of the supply was debt collection and therefore taxable because it was excluded from the exemption.
HMRC appealed to the UT. Between the FTT decision and the hearing before the UT the CJEU gave its decision in HMRC v DPAS Ltd (Case C-5/17) [2018] STC 1615 (25 July 2018) (‘DPAS’). In the light of that decision HMRC disputed whether Target’s supply did include transactions concerning payment or transfer. The UT (Zacaroli J and Judge Greg Sinfield) promulgated its decision on 15 November 2019 [2019] UKUT 340 (TCC), [2020] STC 1. It held that:
The decision of the CJEU in DPAS is, in our judgement, clear and unambiguous. Where the relevant service at issue involves the giving of an instruction to a financial institution to effect a payment, it does not constitute an exempt supply even though it may be a necessary step in order for the payment to be made.”
The UT further held that the role carried out by Target in processing payments was indistinguishable from that of the taxpayer in DPAS and that it did not therefore fall within the article 135(1)(d) exemption. It also held that Target’s inputting of accounting entries in the loan accounts did not fall within the exemption as it did not change any party’s legal and financial position. It therefore concluded that the services supplied by Target to Shawbrook were not exempt under article 135(1)(d) but were standard rated supplies for VAT purposes. In those circumstances it was not necessary for the UT to decide whether Target’s services would be excluded from the exemption as debt collection and so it did not address that issue.
Target appealed to the Court of Appeal. In its decision of 12 July 2021 the Court of Appeal (Underhill VP, Henderson and Simler LJJ) dismissed the appeal [2021] EWCA Civ 1043. The lead judgment was given by Simler LJ, with whom Underhill VP and Henderson LJ agreed. In a thorough and fully reasoned judgment the Court of Appeal upheld the conclusion of the UT on the principal issue. In those circumstances the Court of Appeal similarly did not find it necessary to address the debt collection issue.
6 The interpretation of VAT exemptions
The following points are of relevance (see the Court of Appeal judgment at paras 17, 19 and 20):
The exemptions contained in the PVD (and formerly the Sixth Directive) are independent concepts of EU law.
The terms used in the PVD to specify exemptions must be interpreted strictly because they constitute exceptions to the general rule that VAT is to be levied on all services supplied for consideration by a taxable person.
Where there is a specific exemption (here for the management of credit but only by the grantor of that credit), a broader exemption (here, article 135(1)(d)) should not be interpreted so widely as to undermine the deliberate legislative choice made in restricting other exemptions.
Conversely, the phrase “debt collection” in article 135(1)(d) must be construed broadly because it is an exception to the exemption.
What is meant by a strict interpretation was explained by Chadwick LJ in Expert Witness Institute v Customs and Excise Comrs [2001] EWCA Civ 1882, [2002] 1 WLR 1674, [2002] STC 42 as follows:
… A ‘strict’ construction is not to be equated, in this context, with a restricted construction. The court must recognise that it is for a supplier, whose supplies would otherwise be taxable, to establish that it comes within the exemption; so that, if the court is left in doubt whether a fair interpretation of the words of the exemption cover the supplies in question, the claim to the exemption must be rejected. But the court is not required to reject a claim which does come within a fair interpretation of the words of the exemption because there is another, more restricted, meaning of the words which would exclude the supplies in question.”
The purpose of the financial services exemptions, including article 135(1)(b) and (d), has been stated to be to alleviate the difficulties of determining the consideration for such services and therefore the tax base for VAT liability and also to avoid an increase in the cost of consumer credit – see, for example, Velvet & Steel Immobilien und Handels GmbH v Finanzamt Hamburg-Eimsbüttel (Case C-455/05) [2008] STC 922 at para 24.
7 The relevant case law
The proper interpretation of the case law of the CJEU (which acronym will also be used to refer to the decisions made by the then named European Court of Justice) is critical to the resolution of the payments/transfers issue. Target contends that the relevant principles were set out in the CJEU decision in Sparekassernes Datacenter (SDC) v Skatteministeriet (Case C-2/95) [1997] ECR I-3017, [1997] STC 932 (‘SDC’). Target submits that that decision was correctly interpreted by the Court of Appeal in Customs and Excise Comrs v FDR Limited [2000] STC 672 (‘FDR’). In that case it was held that services which involve giving instructions which will automatically and inevitably result in a payment being made fall within the article 135(1)(d) exemption. Later CJEU case law, including DPAS, has re-affirmed the correctness of the long-established principles set out in SDC. The Court of Appeal was wrong to interpret DPAS as departing from the law set out in SDC, as interpreted in FDR, and thereby to disturb the settled state of the law.
To address this case it will be necessary to analyse the case law in some detail. This will be done chronologically. The following analysis has been considerably assisted by that carried out by the Court of Appeal at paras 30 to 71 and the admirably clear and succinct written and oral submissions of Ms Hui Ling McCarthy KC for HMRC.
SDC
SDC was the first case to consider the scope of the article 135(1)(d) exemption (then article 13B(d)(3) of the Sixth Directive).
SDC was a Danish association, most of whose members were savings banks, which provided to members and customers connected to its data-handling network various services, including the execution of transfers, the provision of advice on and trade in securities, and the management of deposits, purchase contracts and loans. SDC claimed to be within the exemption and various questions were referred by the Danish court to the CJEU.
A number of principles relevant to the interpretation of the exemption were set out by the CJEU in its judgment. These include:
The transactions exempted depend on the nature of the services provided rather than the identity of the person or type of person supplying or receiving those services (para 32).
The manner in which the service is performed, whether electronically, automatically or manually, does not affect the application of the exemption (para 37).
Linguistic differences in terminology regarding the phrase “transactions…concerning” mean that its scope “cannot be determined on the basis of an interpretation which is exclusively textual” and reference must therefore be made to the context in which the phrase occurs and the structure of the Directive (para 22).
The exemption is not restricted to services which a financial institution provides to an end customer but includes services provided by operators other than banks to persons other than their end customers (paras 56 and 57).
The core reasoning of the judgment is set out in paras 53 and 66 of the judgment. Para 53 provides:
“…it must be noted first of all that a transfer is a transaction consisting of the execution of an order for the transfer of a sum of money from one bank account to another. It is characterised in particular by the fact that it involves a change in the legal and financial situation existing between the person giving the order and the recipient and between those parties and their respective banks and, in some cases, between the banks. Moreover, the transaction which produces this change is solely the transfer of funds between accounts, irrespective of its cause. Thus, a transfer being only a means of transmitting funds, the functional aspects are decisive for the purpose of determining whether a transaction constitutes a transfer for the purposes of the Sixth Directive.”
This establishes that:
A transaction concerning a transfer means “the execution of an order for the transfer of a sum of money from one bank account to another”.
The execution of such an order requires a “change in the legal and financial situation” of the relevant parties.
That means a change in the legal and financial situation as between the payer and the payee and/or the payer and its bank or the payee and its bank and/or between the banks involved in the transfer.
Para 66 of SDC provides:
“In order to be characterised as exempt transactions for the purposes of points (3) and (5) of article 13B, the services provided by a data-handling centre must, viewed broadly, form a distinct whole, fulfilling in effect the specific, essential functions of a service described in those two points. For 'a transaction concerning transfers', the services provided must therefore have the effect of transferring funds and entail changes in the legal and financial situation. A service exempt under the directive must be distinguished from a mere physical or technical supply, such as making a data-handling system available to a bank. In this regard, the national court must examine in particular the extent of the data-handling centre's responsibility vis-à-vis the banks, in particular the question whether its responsibility is restricted to technical aspects or whether it extends to the specific, essential aspects of the transactions.”
This emphasises that, “viewed broadly” and as “a distinct whole”, to be exempt the services must (i) have the effect of transferring funds and (ii) change the legal and financial situation (in the manner set out in para 53). What remained arguably unclear was whether the services must in themselves have that effect and make that change (‘the narrow interpretation’) or whether it was sufficient for them to have that causal effect (‘the wider interpretation’).
It is to be noted, however, that the CJEU specifically rejected SDC’s argument that it was sufficient for the service provided to be a necessary element of a complete service (para 63). As stated in para 65:
“…since point (3) of article 13B(d) of the Sixth Directive must be interpreted strictly, the mere fact that a constituent element is essential for completing an exempt transaction does not warrant the conclusion that the service which that element represents is exempt. The interpretation put forward by SDC cannot therefore be accepted.”
FDR
FDR was a decision of the Court of Appeal. FDR provided credit card services to banks. Its clients were either issuers (banks who issued credit cards to cardholders) or acquirers (banks who paid merchants, normally retailers, in exchange for vouchers accepted by those merchants in payment for goods and services) or both. FDR’s services enabled the movement of monies between banks, including by instructing BACS to make transfers following debit and credit card transactions by debiting the account of the acquirer and crediting the account of the merchant customer. For present purposes the key issue is whether the transfers effected through BACS were transactions falling within the exemption.
HMRC argued that the transfers were not within the exemption because, following SDC, a transaction concerning a transferrequired the execution of the transfer rather than merely an instruction to do so – ie the narrow interpretation. The Court of Appeal rejected this argument. It held that it was sufficient if the services had the automatic and inevitable effect of executing a transfer. They did not in themselves have to do so – ie the wider interpretation. Laws LJ gave the leading judgment (with which Ward LJ and Bell J agreed). He held as follows:
…it is in my judgment of the first importance to recognise that BACS for its own part exercises no judgment or discretion whatever. Once the relevant tape is prepared (and that is admittedly done by FDR) and delivered to BACS, the process is, as I have said, automatic. Moreover the inevitable outcome is a redistribution of the rights and obligations of payor andpayee--a 'change in the legal and financial situation'-the very circumstances which in my judgment constitute a transfer of funds for the purposes of article 13B(d)(3). As far as I can see that result would only not be arrived at if the BACS hardware or software were to break down, or if (assuming this were possible) FDR were to countermand its instructions during the BACS payment cycle. In those circumstances BACS is in my judgment merely the agency by which FDR effects transfers, in the four situations I have identified. Any other conclusion would be contrary to the good sense of the general law: Qui facit per alium facit per se [he who does a thing through another does it himself]. And I cannot in this see the least affront to the reasoning in SDC: quite the contrary: it is a conclusion which conforms to the letter and spirit of article 13B(d) as it was explained in that case.”