Tag: Tax planning

Italy vs GKN, October 2023, Supreme Court, No 29936/2023

The tax authorities had notified the companies GKN Driveline Firenze s.p.a. and GKN Italia s.p.a. of four notices of assessment, relating to the tax periods from 2002 to 2005, as well as 2011. The assessments related to the signing of a leasing contract, concerning a real estate complex, between GKN Driveline Firenze s.p.a. and the company TA. p.a. and the company TAU s.r.l.. A property complex was owned by the company GKN-Birfield s.p.a. of Brunico and was leased on an ordinary lease basis by the company GKN Driveline Firenze s.p.a. Both companies belonged to a multinational group headed by the company GKN-PLC, the parent company of the finance company GKN Finance LTD and the Italian parent company GKN-Birfield s.p.a., which in turn controlled GKN Driveline Firenze s.p.a. and TAU s.r.l. GKN Driveline Firenze s.p.a. expressed interest in acquiring ownership of the real estate complex; the real estate complex, however, was first sold to TAU s. s.r.l. and, on the same date, the latter granted it to the aforesaid company by means of a transfer lease. Further negotiated agreements were also entered into within the corporate group, as the purchase of the company TAU s.r.l. was financed by the company GKN Finance LTD, at the instruction of GKN- PLC, for an amount which, added to its own capital, corresponded to the purchase price of the property complex. The choice of entering into the transferable leasing contract, instead of its immediate purchase, had led the tax authorities to suggest that this different negotiation had had, as its sole motivation, the aim of unduly obtaining the tax advantage of being able to deduct the lease payments for the nine years of the contract while, if the property complex had been purchased, the longer and more onerous deduction of the depreciation allowances would have been required. The office had therefore suggested that the transaction had been carried out with abuse of law, given that the transfer leasing contract had to be considered simulated, with fictitious interposition of TAU s.r.l. in the actual sale and purchase that took place between GKN Driveline Firenze s.p.a. and GKN Birfield s.p.a. The companies filed appeals against the aforesaid tax assessments, which, after being joined, had been accepted by the Provincial Tax Commission of Florence. The tax authorities then appealed against the Provincial Tax Commission’s ruling. The Regional Tax Commission of Tuscany upheld the appeal of the tax authorities, finding the grounds of appeal well-founded. The appeal judge pointed out that the principle of the prohibition of abuse of rights, applicable also beyond the specific hypotheses set forth in Art. 37bis, Presidential Decree no. 600/1973, presupposes the competition of three characterising elements, such as the distorted use of legal instruments, the absence of valid autonomous economic reasons and the undue tax advantage. In the case at hand, the distorted use of the negotiation acts was reflected in the fact that the leasing contract had been implemented in a parallel and coordinated manner with a plurality of functionally relevant negotiation acts in a context of group corporate connection in which each of these negotiation acts had contributed a concausal element for the purposes of obtaining the desired result. In this context, it was presumable that the company TAU s.r.l., which had been dormant for a long time and had largely insufficient capital, had been appropriately regenerated and purposely financed within the same group to an extent corresponding to the cost of the deal and that, therefore, the leasing contract had been made to allow GKN Driveline Firenze s.p.a. to obtain the resulting tax benefits. The appeal court nevertheless held that the penalties were not applicable. GKN Driveline Firenze s.p.a. and GKN Italia s.p.a. filed an appeal with the Supreme Court. Judgement of the Supreme Court The Supreme Court set aside the decision of the Regional Tax Commission and refered the case back to the Regional Tax Commission, in a different composition. Excerpts “The judgment of the judge of appeal moves promiscuously along the lines of the relative simulation of the agreements entered into within the corporate group and the abuse of rights, with overlapping of factual and legal arguments, while it is up to the judge of merit to select the evidentiary material and from it to derive, with logically and legally correct motivation, the exact qualification of the tax case. In the case in point, the trial judge reasoned in terms of abuse of rights, assuming that the leasing transaction was carried out in place of the less advantageous direct sale, in terms of depreciation charges, but, in this context, he also introduced the figure of relative simulation, which entails a different underlying assumption: that is, that the leasing transaction was not carried out, since the parties actually wanted to enter into a direct sale. Also in this case, no specification is made, at the logical argumentative level, of the assumptions on the basis of which the above-mentioned relative simulation was deemed to have to be configured. Having thus identified the legal terms of the question, the reasoning of the judgment does not fully develop any of the topics of investigation that are instead required for the purposes of ascertaining the abuse of rights, both from the point of view of the anomaly of the negotiating instruments implemented within the corporate group and of the undue tax advantage pursued, while, on the other hand, it appears to be affected by intrinsic contradiction, because it is based simultaneously on both categories, abuse of rights and relative simulation, so that it is not clear whether, in the view of the appeal court, the tax recovery is to be regarded as legitimate because the leasing transaction was aimed exclusively at the pursuit of a tax saving or because that undue tax advantage was achieved through the conclusion of a series of fictitious transactions, both in relation to the financing and to the aforementioned leasing transaction in the absence of any real transfer of immovable property. In conclusion, the sixth plea in law ...

Australian Treasury issues Consultation Paper on Multinational Tax Integrity and Tax Transparency

As part of a multinational tax integrity package aimed to address the tax avoidance practices of multinational enterprises (MNEs) and improve transparency through better public reporting of MNEs’ tax information, the Australian Treasury issued a Consultation Paper in August 2022. This paper seeks to consult on the implementation of proposals to: amend Australia’s existing thin capitalisation rules to limit interest deductions for MNEs in line with the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)’s recommended approach under Action 4 of the Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) program (Part 1); introduce a new rule limiting MNEs’ ability to claim tax deductions for payments relating to intangibles and royalties that lead to insufficient tax paid (Part 2); and ensure enhanced tax transparency by MNEs (Part 3), through measures such as public reporting of certain tax information on a country‑by‑country basis; mandatory reporting of material tax risks to shareholders; and requiring tenderers for Australian government contracts to disclose their country of tax domicile. The changes contemplated seek to target activities deliberately designed to minimise tax, while also considering the need to attract and retain foreign capital and investment in Australia, limit potential additional compliance cost considerations for business, and continue to support genuine commercial activity ...

Brazil vs Macopolo, July 2014, Supreme Tax Appeal Court, Case no 9101-001.954

The case involved export transactions carried out by a company domiciled in Brazil, Marcopolo, manufacturing bus bodies (shells) which were sold to subsidiary trading companies domiciled in low tax jurisdictions (Jurisdição com Tributação Favorecida). The trading companies would then resell the bus bodies (shells) to unrelated companies in different countries. The tax authorities argued that the sale of the bus bodies to the intermediary trading companies carried out prior to the sale to the final customers lacked business purpose and economic substance and were therefore a form of abusive tax planning. The Court reached the decision that the transactions had a business purpose and were therefore legally acceptable. Click here for translation ...

India vs Vodafone International Holdings BV, 2012, Supreme Court

In the Vodafone case, the Supreme Court of India found that tax planning within the law will be valid as long as it does not amount to a colourable device ...

India vs Azadi Bachao Andolan, 2003, Supreme Court

In this case the Court held that while a “colourable device” could result in the transaction being considered a sham, that did not mean that tax planning within the law will not be permitted ...