Stoke-on-Trent City Council v Wood Mitchell & Co Ltd
(Before Lord Justice STEPHENSON, Lord Justice ROSKILL and Lord Justice GEOFFREY LANE)
Compensation for compulsory acquisition–Disturbance compensation–Appeal from Lands Tribunal–Temporary loss of income–Whether compensation should be reduced to take account of corporation tax which would have been payable–Applicability of ‘West Suffolk County Council v W Rought Ltd’–Principle of ‘Rought’ case to be applied only if absolutely clear that compensation would not be taxable–Effect of Finance Act 1969, Schedule 19, para 11–Apportionment of compensation to distinguish income from capital element–Compensation for temporary loss of profits can, as a result, be treated as trading receipt–Council to pay full sum, leaving claimants to account for any tax–Appeal dismissed
This was an appeal
by Stoke-on-Trent City Council from a decision of the Lands Tribunal (V G
Wellings QC) (1977) 241 EG 856, [1977] 1 EGLR 156 concerning the amount of
compensation payable to Wood Mitchell & Co Ltd in respect of the compulsory
acquisition of certain office and warehouse premises at 5, 7 and 9 Lindop
Street, Stoke-on-Trent. The point at issue was the amount payable for
disturbance under the heading of temporary loss of profits while the
respondents’ offices and warehouse were being re-established, and the specific
question was whether this amount should be adjusted to take account of
corporation tax.
R Bramwell
(instructed by S W Titchener, Town Hall, Stoke-on-Trent) appeared on behalf of
the appellant council; D A Shirley (instructed by Breton, Deacon & Co, of
Stoke-on-Trent) represented the respondents.
Compensation for compulsory acquisition–Disturbance compensation–Appeal from Lands Tribunal–Temporary loss of income–Whether compensation should be reduced to take account of corporation tax which would have been payable–Applicability of ‘West Suffolk County Council v W Rought Ltd’–Principle of ‘Rought’ case to be applied only if absolutely clear that compensation would not be taxable–Effect of Finance Act 1969, Schedule 19, para 11–Apportionment of compensation to distinguish income from capital element–Compensation for temporary loss of profits can, as a result, be treated as trading receipt–Council to pay full sum, leaving claimants to account for any tax–Appeal dismissed
This was an appeal
by Stoke-on-Trent City Council from a decision of the Lands Tribunal (V G
Wellings QC) (1977) 241 EG 856, [1977] 1 EGLR 156 concerning the amount of
compensation payable to Wood Mitchell & Co Ltd in respect of the compulsory
acquisition of certain office and warehouse premises at 5, 7 and 9 Lindop
Street, Stoke-on-Trent. The point at issue was the amount payable for
disturbance under the heading of temporary loss of profits while the
respondents’ offices and warehouse were being re-established, and the specific
question was whether this amount should be adjusted to take account of
corporation tax.
R Bramwell
(instructed by S W Titchener, Town Hall, Stoke-on-Trent) appeared on behalf of
the appellant council; D A Shirley (instructed by Breton, Deacon & Co, of
Stoke-on-Trent) represented the respondents.
Giving the
judgment of the court at the invitation of Stephenson LJ, ROSKILL LJ said: This
is an appeal by way of case stated by the Lands Tribunal dated October 3 1977.
The decision was that of Mr V G Wellings QC as a member of that tribunal which
he gave in writing on February 8 1977 and arose out of a reference to it of a
dispute between the claimants, Wood Mitchell & Co Ltd (the respondents in
this court) and the Stoke-on-Trent City Council (the appellants in this court)
concerning the quantum of compensation payable by the appellants to the
respondents in respect of the compulsory acquisition by the appellants of
certain property belonging to the respondents at Stoke-on-Trent.
The facts
which gave rise to the dispute are stated with admirable clarity by the member
in his decision [(1977) 241 EG at 856] and we gratefully borrow that statement
verbatim:
By an
agreement in writing dated March 13 1969 the claimants agreed to sell and the
acquiring authority to buy the above-mentioned land and premises at the price
of £6,000. In the same agreement the acquiring authority agreed to sell and the
claimants to buy back part of the land and premises acquired by the acquiring
authority and and at the price of £3,000. All the land retained by the
acquiring authority after March 13 1969 was in its possession by November 1968.
The transaction action provided for in the agreement dated March 13 1969 was
completed on July 21 1970, when conveyances putting the agreement into effect
were executed. The purpose of the claimants buying back part of the land and
premises was to enable them to re-establish their offices and warehouse. Their
claim to compensation under rule (6) relates to the temporary losses which they
suffered in the years 1969 to 1971 while their offices and warehouse were being
re-established.
In the
agreement dated March 13 1969 it was acknowledged by the acquiring authority
that the property acquired by it under the agreement did not take into account
any compensation for disturbance consequent upon the making of the compulsory
purchase order; it was thus agreed that the acquiring authority should pay to
the claimants such sum as might be agreed in respect of compensation for
disturbance, together with any interest properly payable thereon and in default
of agreement such sum as might be fixed in respect thereof by the Lands
Tribunal. This reference is therefore to be regarded as a reference by consent.
No evidence was called at the hearing because all the facts had been agreed.
Indeed the parties were in agreement as to the gross amount of compensation
under rule (6) to which the claimants are22
entitled. It was agreed that that gross amount is £12,633.77. It was further
agreed that of that sum items totalling £405.50 are of a capital nature,
leaving a balance of £12,228.27. The only question which the tribunal was asked
to resolve is whether, and if so to what extent, that balance should be
adjusted to take account of corporation tax.
Thus the
member had to determine whether the respondents should receive £12,228.27 in
addition to the £6,000 and the £405.50 or only some lesser sum arrived at in
accordance with the decision of the House of Lords in West Suffolk County
Council v W Rought Ltd [1957] AC 403, applying the principles
previously laid down by the House in British Transport Commission v Gourley
[1956] AC 185 to payments of compensation under the Acquisition of Land
(Assessment of Compensation) Act 1919, the statutory precursor of the Land
Compensation Act 1961, under which the respondents’ present entitlement to
compensation arises. It is not, and indeed could not be, suggested that there
was any relevant difference between section 5(2) and (6) of the latter statute
and section 2(2) and (6) of the former statute. The argument for the appellants
which the member rejected and which was repeated in this court with conspicuous
ability by Mr Bramwell ran thus:
1. Ever since
the decisions of the House of Lords in IRC v Glasgow & South
Western Railway (1887) 12 App Cas 315 and of this court in Horn v Sunderland
Corporation [1941] 2 KB 26 it has been the relevant law that compensation
for disturbance in connection with the compulsory acquisition of land is to be
treated as part of the price payable for the land compulsorily taken. See
especially the judgment of Scott LJ in the latter case at pp 43-45.
2. Even though
that compensation for disturbance might reflect loss of profits which, had they
been earned in the ordinary course of business in the absence of that disturbance
caused by the compulsory acquisition, would have been chargeable to income tax,
nonetheless that compensation being part of the price payable for the
compulsory acquisition is not liable to such tax in the hands of the recipient.
3. In Rought’s
case the Inland Revenue wrote a letter–see p 407 of the report–stating that
they did not regard such compensation as liable to taxation for income tax
purposes. Though the Inland Revenue were not parties to that dispute, Lord
Morton of Henryton, who delivered the leading speech in the House of Lords at p
412 of the report, said: ‘My Lords, the question whether any sum awarded to the
respondents under heading 3B is or is not liable to income tax is not before
the House, but I see no reason to doubt that the view of the Board of Inland
Revenue as expressed in the letter of February 16 1954 was correct and I have
formed the opinion which I am about to express upon the footing that this is
so.’ The House accordingly held unanimously
that the Lands Tribunal ought to have estimated to the best of their ability
the amount of additional taxation which the claimants in that case would have
had to bear if they had actually earned during the period in question the sum
awarded to them as compensation for disturbance and then should have reduced
the award by that amount–see the speech of Lord Morton at p 413.
4. That
principle still applied today to reduce the figure of £12,228.27 by a sum equal
to the amount of corporation income tax calculated at the rate of 42.5 per cent
which the respondents would have had to pay on that sum had that sum been
earned by them as profits during the period in question. It is convenient to
interpose at this point that, for ease of reference in this judgment, we shall
use the phrase ‘corporation income tax’ and ‘corporation capital gains tax’ in
the same sense as did the member in his decision.
5. This would
result in the figure payable for compensation being reduced to £7,031.26.
6. The
position established by Rought’s case remained unaffected by the
introduction in 1965 of capital gains tax and by the introduction in 1970 of
corporation tax. There was still no liability on the part of the respondents to
pay corporation income tax on this sum, and so far as corporation capital gains
tax was concerned paragraph 11 of Schedule 19 to the Finance Act 1969 exempted
this sum from liability to corporation capital gains tax in the hands of the
respondents. It was for this reason that the respondents’ alternative argument
that if they were liable to suffer any corporation capital gains tax on this
sum at the rate of 30 per cent then the figure of £7,031.26 should be grossed
up by a multiplier of 10/7 to produce a figure of £10,044.65 was erroneous,
since there was no liability for corporation capital gains tax and therefore no
need to introduce such compensatory grossing up.
The
respondents contended (perhaps unusually for a taxpayer) that they were liable
for either or both corporation income tax or corporation capital gains tax on
this sum and that accordingly the principle laid down in Rought’s case
was no longer applicable to payments for compensation for disturbance. The
position in relation to liability to tax upon compensation of this kind was now
akin to the position established by this court in London and Thames Haven
Oil Wharves Ltd v Attwooll [1967] 1 Ch 772, where it was held that
so much of the damages received by jetty owners as related to loss of earnings
of, as distinct from compensation for physical damage to, a jetty was a taxable
revenue receipt. See the judgment of Diplock LJ (as he then was) at pp 815 and
816 of the report.
Though in our
view in the ultimate analysis our decision turns upon the true construction of
paragraph 11 of Schedule 19 to the Finance Act 1969, it is necessary to examine
certain other legislative provisions dealing with the imposition first of
capital gains tax and then of corporation tax in order that the somewhat
obscurely worded paragraph may be interpreted in its proper setting, but before
we do so, we think it necessary to draw attention to one important distinction
between Rought’s case and the present. In Rought’s case, as
already pointed out, the Inland Revenue had made plain that in their view no
income tax was chargeable on the compensation in question and the House of
Lords proceeded upon the assumption that that view was correct. In the present
case the Inland Revenue have written no such letter nor given any such
assurance. On the contrary, an exchange of letters between the respondents and
one department of the Inland Revenue suggested that the Inland Revenue would,
or at least might, seek to contend that corporation capital gains tax was
payable. The appellants’ counsel read a letter from the Solicitor to the Board
of Inland Revenue written to their solicitors after the decision of the member
declining to take any part in these proceedings, though invited to consider
doing so. At one point we considered inviting the Inland Revenue to instruct
counsel to appear before us as amicus curiae in order to give us the
benefit of the board’s views on the issue we have to decide, since we were
reluctant to give our decision without it. But having read that letter, we
appreciate his reasons for not wishing to take part in a dispute with which his
department is not directly concerned and we therefore did not further press the
initial suggestion.
We regard the
position of the Inland Revenue in this case as of importance. If hereafter an
attempt is made by the Inland Revenue to levy tax in one form or another upon
that sum in the hands of the respondents and that attempt ultimately succeeded,
after we in this court had held, reversing the Lands Tribunal, that some lesser
sum were payable by the appellants because of the application of Rought’s
case, a grave injustice would have been done to the respondents. They would
have received a lesser amount from the appellants on the basis that that which
they received would not be taxable in their hands, and yet they would or might
thereafter have to pay tax at the instance of the Inland Revenue on that lesser
amount.
Since the
purpose of decisions such as those in Gourley and Rought was to
secure that a successful plaintiff or claimant did not get more by way of
damages or compensation than would have been received by him in the absence of
his injuries or of the compulsory acquisition in question, as the case might
be, it23
seems somewhat strange that the principle underlying those decisions should be
able to be invoked by the appellants in order to produce the result that the
respondents, in the absence of any assurance from the Inland Revenue that no
attempt would be made to levy tax upon this sum, stood in peril of receiving
considerably less than that which they would have received had their capacity
to earn continued unaffected by compulsory acquisition. In such circumstances
the more natural course, which would avoid any risk of injustice, would be for
the respondents to receive the full sum, leaving the question of liability to
tax, if any, to be adjusted thereafter between the respondents and the Inland
Revenue.
We take the
view that the principles laid down in Rought’s case can only be applied
if after examination of the relevant statutory provisions it is clear beyond
peradventure that the sum in question would not be taxable in the hands of the
respondents. If that is clear, then it would be wrong to require the appellants
to compensate the respondents beyond the amount of the loss which the
respondents would in truth suffer. But if it is not, then it seems to us unjust
that in a doubtful situation the appellants can get the benefit of a reduced
payment while leaving the respondents exposed to the risks we have mentioned.
Consideration of abstract justice might be thought to suggest that the
respondents should receive the full sum and then in due course account to the
Inland Revenue for any tax properly chargeable upon that amount.
It is against
that background that we turn to consider the relevant statutory provisions. We
think it preferable to deal with these in chronological rather than perhaps
strictly logical order. We start with the relevant provisions of the Finance
Act 1965. We turn first to Part III, which bears the main rubric ‘Capital
Gains’ and section 19 bears the title ‘General’. Subsection (1) provides thus:
Tax shall be
charged in accordance with this Act in respect of capital gains, that is to say
chargeable gains computed in accordance with this Act and accruing to a person
on the disposal of assets.
Section 22(1)
provides:
All forms of
property shall be assets for the purposes of this Part of this Act, whether
situated in the United Kingdom or not, including . . . (c) any form of property
created by the person disposing of it, or otherwise coming to be owned without
being acquired.
(3) Subject
to subsection (6) of this section, and to the exceptions in this Part of this
Act, there is for the purposes of this Part of this Act a disposal of assets by
their owner where any capital sum is derived from assets notwithstanding that
no asset is acquired by the person paying the capital sum, and this subsection
applies in particular to–(a) capital sums received by way of compensation for
any kind of damage or injury to assets or for the loss, destruction or
dissipation of assets, or for any depreciation or risk of depreciation of an
asset.
Subsection (9)
provides:
The amount of
the gains accruing on the disposal of assets shall be computed in accordance
with Part I of Schedule 6 to this Act, and subject to the further provisions in
Schedules 7 and 8 to this Act, and in this section ‘capital sum’ means any
money or money’s worth which is not excluded from the consideration taken into
account in the computation under the said Part I of Schedule 6 to this Act.
We turn next
to Schedule 6. Paragraph 1 of Part I of this Schedule provides:
The
provisions of this Schedule shall have effect for computing for the purposes of
this Part of this Act the amount of a gain accruing on the disposal of an
asset.
Paragraph 2
provides:
There shall
be excluded from the consideration for a disposal of assets taken into account
in the computation under this Schedule of the gain accruing on that disposal
any money or money’s worth charged to income tax as income of . . . the person
making the disposal for the purposes of the Income Tax Acts.
Paragraph
21(4) provides:
For the
purposes of any computation under this Schedule any necessary apportionment
shall be made of any consideration or of any expenditure and the method of
apportionment adopted shall, subject to the express provisions of this
Schedule, be such method as appears to the inspector or on appeal the
Commissioners concerned to be just and reasonable.
Next the
Finance Act 1969. Section 42 of that Act provides:
Schedule 19
to this Act (which makes further provision for amending the enactments relating
to long-term and short-term capital gains) shall have effect.
We turn next
to paragraph 11(1) of Schedule 19, which is the all-important provision for the
purposes of the present appeal.
Where land or
an interest in or a right over land is acquired after April 29 1969 and the
acquisition is, or could have been, made under compulsory powers, then in
considering whether, under paragraph 21(4) of Schedule 6 to the Finance Act
1965, the purchase price or compensation or other consideration for the
acquisition should be apportioned and treated in part as a capital sum within
section 22(3) (a) of the said Act, whether as compensation for loss of good
will or for disturbance or otherwise, or should be apportioned in any other
way, the fact that the acquisition is or could have been made compulsorily, and
any statutory provision treating the purchase price or compensation or other
consideration as exclusively paid in respect of the land itself, shall be
disregarded.
Finally, the
Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1970. We start with section 238(1), which
provides that corporation tax shall be charged upon the profits of companies.
Subsection (4) of the same section defines ‘profits’ as ‘income and chargeable
gains’.
Section 250
provides that subject to certain exceptions the amount of any income of a
corporation shall for the purpose of corporation tax be computed in accordance
with income tax principles. Section 265, which opens Chapter II of Part XI of
this statute with the rubric ‘Companies’ Capital Gains,’ provides that the
amount to be included in respect of chargeable gains in a company’s total
profits for any accounting period shall be the total amount of chargeable gains
accruing to the company in the accounting period after deducting allowable
losses. Subsection (2) provides (inter alia) that the total amount of
such chargeable gains shall for the purposes of corporation tax be computed in
accordance with the principles applying to capital gains tax.
Thus
corporation tax is comprised of the two elements, income tax and capital gains
tax, the relevant statutory provisions applicable to the calculation of each
being applied to the calculation of those two elements in corporation tax.
We think that
consideration of the present problem must start from the fact that the decided
cases clearly show that compensation payable for compulsory acquisition,
whatever its component parts, constitutes a single payment which, at least
before the Finance Acts 1965 and 1969, was not chargeable to income tax in the
hands of the recipient. We understood Mr Bramwell to accept that, but for
paragraph 11 of Schedule 19 to the 1969 Act, the whole of that single payment
would have been liable to capital gains tax under section 22 of the Finance Act
1965. His argument was that paragraph 11 was directed to permitting a breakdown
of this single payment into its component parts and then to exempting that part
which related to capital from capital gains tax while leaving the existing
freedom from liability to income tax unaffected. He contended that any other
view involved that paragraph 11, appearing as it does in legislation dealing
only with capital gains tax, would have to be construed as imposing a charge to
income tax where such liability had not previously existed, a result he
contended was unsupported at least by the express language of that paragraph.
That argument undoubtedly has force, but before it can be accepted paragraph 11
must be subjected to closer analysis.
The paragraph
is clearly directed to the possibility of and the manner of apportionment for
the purpose of capital gains tax legislation of ‘the purchase price or
compensation or other consideration for the acquisition’ in accordance with
paragraph 21(4) of Schedule 6 to the Finance Act 1965. The paragraph further
clearly contemplates that that apportionment may result in part only of the
compensation being treated as a capital sum within section 22(3)(a) of that Act
(which, as already pointed out, refers to capital sums received by way of
compensation for any kind of damage or injury to assets) ‘whether as
compensation for loss of goodwill or for disturbance or otherwise’. It also
provides that that need not be the only manner of apportion-24
ment but contemplates that apportionment may be made ‘in any other way.’ Then if and when any such apportionment is
made the fact of compulsory acquisition and any statutory provision (a phrase
which we think, as the member did, must extend to cover any judicial
interpretation of any statutory provision) shall be disregarded. Paragraph 21
of Schedule 6 to the Finance Act 1965–as already stated–provides that, subject
to the provisions of that schedule, the method of apportionment shall be such
as appears to the inspector or on appeal to the Commissioners concerned to be
just and reasonable.
Construing
this paragraph against the background of the judicial decisions we have
mentioned, section 22 and in particular section 22(3)(a) of the Finance Act
1965, and the reference to the computation of the amount of a gain accruing on
the disposal of an asset in Schedule 6 to that Act, and in particular to
paragraphs 1, 2(1) and 21(4) of that schedule, we think it impossible to avoid
the conclusion that this legislation is directed, first, to imposing a
liability for capital gains tax on compensation for compulsory acquisition upon
the footing that such compensation is a capital sum received upon the disposal
of an asset; secondly, and notwithstanding the antecedent judicial decisions,
to permitting a breakdown of that compensation into its component parts so as
to enable what may be called the capital element and the income element to be
separated by apportionment in such manner as the inspector, or on appeal the
Commissioners, may think just and reasonable; thirdly, to exclude from the
computation of the capital gain accruing from such disposal any money charged
to income tax as the income of the person making the disposal; fourthly, to
ensure that any such apportionment is arrived at without regard to the
antecedent judicial decisions that such compensation is to be treated as
exclusively, ie as a single indivisible sum, paid in respect of the land
itself, so as to abolish the distinction which certainly since the decision in
the London and Thames Haven case and perhaps earlier would seem to have
existed–somewhat illogically–between compensation arising from the negligence
of a tortfeasor which could be broken down into its capital and income
elements, so that income tax was chargeable on the latter but not on the
former, and compensation for compulsory acquisition where seemingly before 1969
such breakdown was not permissible. Then when corporation tax was introduced in
1970 the existing income tax and capital gains tax codes, including provisions
of the Finance Acts 1965 and 1969 already discussed, were applied in their
entirety to bodies corporate such as the respondents.
Like the
member we have arrived at this conclusion as a matter of the construction of
the relevant legislation, which in deference to Mr Bramwell’s argument we have
analysed at some length. But we might have contented ourselves with expressing
our complete agreement with the succinct single sentence in which the member
expressed his conclusion at p 7 of the decision. ‘The effect of an
apportionment to which paragraph 11 refers, though it be made for the purposes
of a computation of capital gain, is to free the compensation for temporary
loss of profits of its capital nature and enable it to be treated for what it
in truth is, namely a trading receipt.’
We would add
that we were referred by counsel to a number of other decisions. We do not
refer to them, for we do not think they in any way help to solve this question
of statutory construction. So far then from it being clear, as it was in Rought’s
case, that no part of the sum in question is liable to tax, we think the Inland
Revenue are entitled to make an apportionment of the compensation as a
consequence, of which, subject to any decision of the commissioners on appeal,
some part of the compensation, being compensation for disturbance, may become
liable in the hands of the respondents to corporation income tax. Rought’s
case is therefore clearly distinguishable. We think it clear, therefore, that
the appellants should pay the full sum to the respondents, leaving the
respondents to account to the Inland Revenue for such sum, if any, as may
subsequently be shown to be due from them to the Inland Revenue by way of
corporation income tax or maybe corporation capital gains tax. Our conclusion
makes it unnecessary to consider the alternative argument about grossing up.
The appeal fails and must be dismissed.
The appeal
was dismissed with costs. Leave to appeal to the House of Lords was refused.