20105

Land - exemptions Item 1 Group 1 Schedule 9 VATA - letting of sports facilities (hockey pitches) within paragraph (m). Application of Note 16: meaning of continuous period of use - meaning of ‘interval between each period of use’ - whether letting from 8.00 a.m. to 9.30 p.m. each day within Note 16 - held no: the letting was standard rated.

LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE

POLO FARM SPORTS CLUBAppellant

- and -

THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY’S
REVENUE AND CUSTOMSRespondents

Tribunal:CHARLES HELLIER (Chairman)

MRS R.S. JOHNSON

Sitting in public in London on 26 February 2007

Graeme MacDonald, member of the Appellant, for the Appellant

Sarabjit Singh of Counsel instructed by the Acting Solicitor for HM Revenue and Customs, for the Respondents

© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2007

1

DECISION

  1. This appeal relates to whether the supply by the Appellant of a licence to use hockey pitches between 8.00 a.m. and 9.30 p.m. each day was an exempt or a standard rated supply. The resolution of the appeal depends upon the proper application and construction of Note 16 of Item 1 Group 1 Schedule 9 VAT 1994.
  2. The Respondents in letters dated 26 April and 10 May 2006 decided that it was an exempt supply. The Appellant contends that it should be standard rated.

Period of Issue

The Facts

  1. There was no disagreement about the relevant facts. It was agreed between the parties that they were as follows:
  2. The Appellant holds land at Polo Farm on which a number of artificial hockey pitches have been constructed. There are other sporting facilities on its land including cricket pitches, tennis courts and changing rooms.
  3. By a licence agreement made in June 2001, the Appellant gave The Association of Canterbury Hockey Clubs (ACHC) permission to use or let these hockey pitches. The licence agreement is short and we set out below its provisions:

“Whereas the Club leases or owns land on which the artificial hockey pitches at Polo Farm are situate (“the pitches”).

NOW IT IS AGREED as follows:

1.LICENCE

The owner gives to the Licensee permission to use or let the pitches daily between the hours of 8. 00 a.m. and 9.30 p.m.on terms set out in the Clauses below.

2.CONSIDERATION

In consideration of the permission granted under the Licence and duties performed by the Club under Clause 4 below the Licensee shall pay to the Club on 30 April each year such amount as may be agreed being not less than £11000 together with VAT thereon, the first payment being due on 30 April 2002.

3.CHARGES TO BE LEVIED BY THE LICENSEE

The Licensee may charge persons using the pitch any price which at its discretion it considers appropriate but such charges must be set at a level which would reasonably be expected to generate in aggregate sufficient income after costs to pay the rental required under this licence.

4.DUTIES OF THE CLUB

The Club undertakes to maintain the pitch and its equipment including the floodlights in a state of good repair and to supply electricity and water as required and reserves the right to enter the pitch for such purpose at any time subject to having given the Licensee one week’s notice.

5.DETERMINATION

This licence shall continue until terminated by twelve month’s notice in writing given by either party to the other or by mutual agreement without written notice.

6.PRIOR AGREEMENTS

This licence replaces any other prior agreements as to the use of the pitches between the Club and the Association or its members and it is hereby confirmed that no rentals are due under any such agreements after 30 April 2001.”

  1. The Appellant lets its sporting facilities to associated sporting clubs.
  2. ACHC is an unincorporated association of three other bodies: Canterbury Hockey Club, Canterbury Ladies Hockey Club, and the Polo Farm Sports and Recreation Association (PFSRA).
  3. Canterbury Hockey Club and Canterbury Ladies Hockey Club play hockey on the pitches; PFSRA licences the Hockey pitches to third parties.
  4. The Appellant is an unincorporated association.
  5. Mr MacDonald has occasionally undertaken routine maintenance work on behalf of the Appellant on the hockey pitches in the hours before 8.00 a.m. in the morning or after 9.30 p.m. at night.
  6. The planning consent for the building of the hockey pitches was subject to a condition that the floodlights should not be used after 9.30 p.m.
  7. The hockey pitches are in a residential area. Hockey practice can be noisy, and the Appellant generally wishes to avoid complaints from its neighbours.

The Legislation

  1. Schedule 9 of VATA sets out the goods and services which are exempt from VAT. The relevant provisions of Group 1, Item 1 of Schedule 9 provide as follows:

“The grant of any interest in or right over land or of any licence to occupy land [is exempt] ….other than -

“(m) the grant of facilities for playing any sport or participating in any physical recreation…

“Notes

(16)Paragraph (m) shall not apply where the grant of the facilities is for:

(a) a continuous period of use exceeding 24 hours; or

(b) a series of 10 or more periods, whether or not exceeding 24 hours in total, where the following conditions are satisfied -

(i)each period is in respect of the same activity carried on at the same place;

(ii)the interval between each period is not less than one day and not more than 14 days;

(iii)consideration is payable by reference to the whole series and is evidenced by written agreement;

(iv)the grantee has exclusive use of the facilities; and

(v)the grantee is a school, a club, an association or an organisation representing affiliated clubs or constituent associations.”

  1. There was no dispute that the licence was the grant of an interest in or right over land within the opening words of Item 1.
  2. Neither was there any dispute that the licence was the grant of facilities for playing a sport within paragraph (m).
  3. The only issue before us was whether Note (16) had effect. It will be seen that if the licence satisfied the conditions in either Note 16(a) or (b) then the supply under the licence was exempt.
  4. In relation to Note 16 paragraph (b) there was agreement before us that the conditions (i), and (iii) to (v) were satisfied. The debate before us therefore turned on whether Note 16(a) was satisfied, and upon whether the condition in paragraph (b)(ii) was met. The Respondents submitted both conditions were satisfied. The supply was exempt if they are correct on either count.

Case Law

  1. Mr MacDonald referred us to In re Railway Sleepers Supply Co [1885] 29 Ch 204 for the meaning of “day” in a statutory provision. The issue in that case was whether a resolution of the company was properly passed as a special resolution. Whether or not it was to be treated as a special resolution depended on section 51 Companies Act 1862 which deemed a resolution to be a special resolution where the resolution was passed at one general meeting and confirmed at a subsequent general meeting “held at an interval of not less than fourteen days” from the date of the first meeting.
  2. Chitty J stated the general rule: that fractions of a day were not reckoned in the computation of time. He noted that there could be exceptions, but, given the use of the word “at”, and the fact that the interval was to be taken from the date of first meeting (which must have meant the whole of the day of that meeting) he found that this was not an exceptional case. The expression required 14 days to lapse between the two dates. He then said:

“Now supposing the statute had said at an interval of not less than one day; if the meeting had been held say on the 1st of January, the second meeting could not properly be held on the 2nd of January, for one day must intervene…” [Mr MacDonald’s emphasis].

and later quoting Alderson B in Young v Higgin 6 M&W 40:

“Where there is given to a party a certain space of time to do some act, which space of time is included between two other acts done by another person, both the days of doing those acts ought to be excluded.”

  1. He concluded that the rule that “day” meant a clear day was a “settled rule” and he was not at liberty to depart from it.
  2. Mr MacDonald also referred us to C&E Comms v Electronic Data Systems Ltd [2003] STC 688, for the proposition that exemptions are to be restrictively interpreted. In that case Jonathan Parker LJ referred to the general approach to be taken to the exemptions in Article 13B of the Sixth Directive: that they should be interpreted strictly and must not exceed what is strictly provided for, although a purposive approach to interpretation was to be followed in the concepts embodied in the individual exemptions. He quoted at paragraph 26 the judgment of Chadwick LJ in Expert Witness Institute v C&E Comms [2002] STC 42 in relation to Article 13A(1)(1) of the Directive where he said at paragraph 17:

“…it is for the supplier, whose supplies would otherwise be taxable, to establish that it carries within the exemption, so that if the court is left in any doubt whether a fair interpretation of the words of the exemption covers the supplies in question, the claim to 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.”

  1. We shall deal with the arguments in relation to Railway Sleepers later but this is a convenient point at which to deal with Mr MacDonald’s general point that the exemption for the supply of a grant of land must be construed strictly in the light of the jurisprudence on exemptions.
  2. Mr Macdonald notes that it is the Respondents not the Appellant who are claiming that the exemption applies. The Respondents should therefore have the burden of establishing exemption, and should do so in the context of a strict construction of the exemption. He notes in particular that the proposal for the Sixth Directive expressed a need to keep the number of exemptions to a minimum inter alia to avoid the inconveniences (mainly in the form of the irrecoverability of output tax) caused by exemptions.
  3. The Respondents point out in their skeleton argument that Article 13B(b) of the Sixth Directive provides for the exemption of the leasing or letting of immovable property subject inter alia to exclusions created in the member states’ discretion. The standard rating of the supplies of grounds goods is an exclusion from the exemption which the UK has chosen to apply within the discretion granted by the Directive. As a result the interpretation of the exclusion is a matter of domestic law only.
  4. We agree. The licencing is within Article 13B(b). There is no question relating to the construction of that Article before us. The strict interpretation of an exemption is the proper approach to the construction of the Directive, but in the context of the interpretation of domestic legislation relating to a category of supplies manifestly within the ambit of the exemption in Article 13, that approach seems to us to be irrelevant.
  5. We therefore approach the construction of Note 16(a) and (b) solely as a matter of the interpretation of domestic provisions unaffected by principles relating to the construction of the Directive.

The Note 16 paragraph (a) issue

The parties’ arguments

  1. The Respondents submit that as a matter of substance and reality of the licence agreement afforded to the licensee continuous use of the playing facilities for many years. The reality was that the hockey pitches had never been hired out to anyone for use before 8.00 a.m. or after 9.30 p.m. on any day. For all practical purposes the licensee had the exclusive right to use the pitches for the entire duration of the licence agreement. It had control over the use of the pitches for all periods when such control mattered or when the pitches were really available for use. The Respondents say that if the Appellant is right then an agreement to let a sports pitch can always be worded so that Note 16(a) makes its letting standard rated: an agreement to let a sports pitch between 2.00 a.m. to midnight for any number of days would not be continuous use for more than 24 hours.
  2. The Respondents note that clause 5 of the licence provides that “[t]his Licence shall continue” for a period which will be at least 12 months. This licence was for more than 24 hours and gave continuous practical use for many months. They say that if clause 1 had provided that the “owner gives to the licensee permission to use the pitches continuously”, the result would have been exactly the same as it is under the licence as drafted.
  3. Mr MacDonald’s response to this substance and reality argument is to say that in substance and reality the licence was for consecutive periods of 131/2 hours and no more. Those are the terms of the licence and they were so determined by the Appellant for good reasons:

(i)because the Appellant wished to keep the peace with its neighbours it wanted to avoid noise and lights before 8.00 a.m. and after 9.30 a.m;

(ii)in the winter the courts needed floodlights and the planning permission for the floodlights required that they were switched off at 9.30 p.m.

  1. These were not said Mr MacDonald artificially contrived restrictions, but real restrictions imposed by the Appellant for good reasons.
  2. We discussed whether the Respondents might formulate their argument in this way: even if this was not a continuous grant of the land, it was a continuous grant of the facilities; and the question asked by Note 16(a) is whether “the grant of the facilities is for… a continuous period of use exceeding 24 hours”. The facilities were effectively available or usable only between 8.00 a.m. and 9.30 p.m. so such use as was available was continuously granted.

Discussion

  1. So far as the Respondents’ primary argument goes, whilst we can see that successive periods of 23 hours, 59 minutes, 59.5 seconds separated by 1/2 a second might fairly be described as a continuous period of more than 24hours - because in reality the cessation of use over the 1/2 second would in almost all cases be wholly illusory, we cannot convince ourselves that if there are 2 hours - or 81/2 hours - each day during which the licensor could obtain an injunction to prevent the licensee using the land, this could possibly give rise to a conclusion that the licensee was given 24 hours continuous use. “Continuous” means without a break, and such use would be with a real and substantial break.
  2. In our view as a matter of substance and reality the licensee did not have continuous use of the land for more than 24 hours.
  3. So far as the secondary formulation goes, it seems to us that the problem with it is that a “grant of facilities” in (m) must be a sub-set of “grant of any interest in land” within Item 1. Thus the “grant of facilities” is short for “the grant of an interest in land which constitutes facilities for playing sport”, and that means that, read properly, the test in Note 16(a) is whether the grant of the interest in the land so constituted is for more than 24 hours continuous use. And for the reasons in the preceding paragraph the grant of the interest in the land is not for a continuous period of use of more than 24 hours.
  4. If Note 16(a) had merely said “a period of use” the Respondents’ arguments might have had some substance, but the use of the word “continuous” seems to us to negate this.
  5. We find that the Condition in Note 16(a) is not satisfied.

The Note 16 paragraph (b)(ii) issue

The parties’ arguments

  1. Mr MacDonald’s first submission was that “day” in paragraph (b) (ii) meant calendar day. That was the normal statutory meaning of day. That was what Chitty J had said in Railway Sleepers. It was settled law. The passages from Chitty J’s judgment quoted above made the position abundantly clear and in words which closely paralleled those in (b) (ii). Not only, however, was that the settled legal meaning of “day”, but the draftsman of Note 16 had clearly appreciated that it was. Where he wanted to refer to 24 hours he had done so: in the words of the immediately preceding paragraph. The distinction between “24 hours” in paragraph (a) and “one day” in paragraph (b) was clearly deliberate. For paragraph (b) (ii) to be satisfied the interval had to be at least one calendar day.
  2. Mr Singh says that Railway Sleepers is not relevant. The language in (b) (ii) is different: it speaks of the interval between each period, not dates “at an interval of”.
  3. Mr MacDonald’s alternative submission is that even if one day merely means 24 hours, the interval between each period of use was the interval from 9.30 p.m. to 8.00 a.m.: 101/2 hours which was clearly less than 24 hours. He points us to the Oxford Compact English Dictionary definition:

interval: an intervening time or space; or a pause or break

between: at into or across the space separating (two objects, places, or points); in the period separating (two points in time).

  1. He says that an interval is a span of time between two things and does not include in its normal meaning either of those two things. The interval to be measured is between two periods; periods are not points in time but are bounded by points in time: the intervening time is between the points at the end of the first period and at the beginning of the second. Lastly, he highlights the language used by Chitty J quoted at paragraph 19 above: usage which clearly assumes the ordinary meaning of “interval between”.
  2. The Respondents’ first submission was that the interval between each period of use was 24 hours. The relevant interval they say should be calculated from the beginning of one period of use to the beginning of the next. The interval between each period of use was from 8.00 a.m. one day to 8.00 a.m. the next.
  3. In the alternative the Respondents say that the purpose of (b) (ii) is to catch a succession of similar single lets on different days and to make such a series exempt. Thus ten one hour lets on Monday each separated by 1/2 hour should be standard rated, but ten lets of one hour each on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday etc. or even on each Monday, Wednesday and Friday of succeeding weeks should be exempt. Properly understood the condition in (b) (ii) is that “each period of use falls into a different calendar day.”

Discussion: paragraph (b)

  1. Assuming that the conditions in Note 16(b)(i) and (iii) to (v) are satisfied, the letting of sporting the facilities will be exempt if:

either