Tag: Withholding tax on interest
UK vs Hargreaves Property Holdings Ltd, April 2024, Court of Appeal, Case No [2024] EWCA Civ 365 (CA-2023-001517)
Hargreaves Property Holdings Ltd paid interest on certain loans between 2010 and 2015. HMRC formed the view that Hargreaves should have deducted and accounted for withholding tax on the interest. Hargreaves disagreed and appealed to the First-tier Tribunal on four grounds. All four grounds were rejected ([2021] UKFTT 390 (TC). Hargreaves then appealed on similar grounds to the Upper Tribunal. Hargreaves’ appeal was dismissed ([2023] UKUT 120 (TCC)). An appeal was filed with the Court of Appeal where two of the four grounds were pursued: whether interest payments made from 2012 onwards to a UK tax resident company, Houmet Trading Limited (“Houmetâ€), fell within the exception from withholding tax in s.933 Income Tax Act 2007 (“ITA 2007â€); and whether interest paid on loans the duration of which was less than a year, but which were routinely replaced by further loans from the same lenders, was “yearly interest†within s.874 ITA 2007. Judgment The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal and upheld the decision of the Upper Tribunal. Excerpts “(…) 81. In conclusion on ground 1, I would dismiss Hargreaves’ appeal. The FTT and UT correctly concluded that Houmet was not beneficially entitled to the interest assigned to it. (…) 86. In this case the FTT found that the loans fulfilled an important commercial need for the business, and (being raised from connected parties) both left the borrower’s assets free from security and could be raised quickly and at minimal cost (para. 78 of the FTT’s decision). They were also repayable on demand (para. 79). However, there was a pattern under which loans were routinely replaced by a further loan from the same lender in the same or a larger amount. The FTT found that the enquiries made of lenders as to whether they wished to carry on lending were formalities, and a new loan was never declined (para. 87). 87. In my view the FTT and UT applied the correct legal approach. The FTT made no legal error in concluding that the interest was yearly interest because the loans were in the nature of long-term funding, were regarded by the lenders as an investment and formed part of the capital of the business, with a permanency that belied their apparent shortterm nature (paras. 79, 81 and 82). It makes no difference to this whether an individual loan happened to last for less than a year. On a business-like assessment, those loans could not be viewed in isolation as short-term advances. In reality, as the FTT concluded at para. 86, the lenders provided attractive long-term funding in the nature of an investment. 88. In conclusion, I would dismiss Hargreaves’ appeal on both grounds. Houmet was not “beneficially entitled†to the interest assigned to it for the purposes of s.933 ITA 2007, and the interest on the loans was yearly interest even if the loan in question had a duration of less than a year.” EWCA Civ 365″] ...
Australia vs Mylan Australia Holding Pty Ltd., March 2024, Federal Court, Case No [2024] FCA 253
Mylan Australia Holding is a subsidiary of the multinational pharmaceutical company Mylan Group. Mylan Australia Holding is the head of the Australian tax consolidated group, which includes its subsidiary Mylan Australia Pty. In 2007, Mylan Australia Pty acquired the shares of Alphapharm Pty Ltd and a substantial loan (A$923,205,336) was provided by a group company in Luxembourg to finance the acquisition. In subsequent years the interest expense was deducted from the taxable income of Mylan’s Australian tax group. The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) issued amended assessments to Mylan Australia Holding disallowing approximately AUD 589 million of interest deductions claimed for the 2007 to 2017 tax years. The ATO had initially pursued the structure as a transfer pricing issue, but ultimately argued that the deductions should be disallowed under the general anti-avoidance rule. Mylan Australia Holding appealed to the Federal Court. Judgment of the Court The Federal Court decided in favour of Mylan Australia Holding and set aside the amended assessment issued by the tax office. Excerpts “The conclusions I have reached on the principal issues are as follows: (a) MAHPL did not obtain a tax benefit in connection with the primary scheme that may be calculated by reference to the primary counterfactual; (b) had none of the schemes been entered into or carried out, the most reliable — and a sufficiently reliable — prediction of what would have occurred is what I have termed the “preferred counterfactualâ€; (c) the principal integers of the preferred counterfactual are as follows: (i) MAPL would have borrowed the equivalent of AUD 785,329,802.60 on 7 year terms under the SCA (specifically the term applying to Tranche B), at a floating rate consistent with the rates specified in the SCA; (ii) MAPL would otherwise have been equity funded to the extent necessary to fund the initial purchase of Alphapharm and to stay within the thin capitalisation safe harbour ratio from time to time; (iii) Mylan would have guaranteed MAPL’s borrowing under the SCA; (iv) Mylan would not have charged MAPL a guarantee fee; (v) interest on the borrowing would not have been capitalised; (vi) MAPL would have been required to pay down the principal on a schedule consistent with that specified in the SCA and would have made voluntary repayments to reduce its debt as necessary to stay within the thin capitalisation safe harbour, from time to time; (vii) MAPL would not have taken out hedges to fix some or all of its interest rate expense; (viii) MAPL would have taken out cross-currency swaps into AUD at an annual cost of 3.81% per annum over AUD 3 month BBSW; and (ix) if MAPL’s cashflow was insufficient to meet its interest or principal repayment obligations, Mylan would have had another group company loan MAPL the funds necessary to avoid it defaulting on its obligations, resulting in MAPL owing those funds to that related company lender by way of an intercompany loan, accruing interest at an arm’s length rate; (d) MAHPL did (subject to matters of calculation) obtain a tax benefit in connection with the schemes, being the difference between the deductions for interest obtained in fact, and the deductions for interest that would be expected to be allowed on the preferred counterfactual; and (e) MAHPL has discharged its onus in relation to the dominant purpose enquiry specified by s 177D of the ITAA36 and so has established that the assessments issued to it were excessive.” “Conclusions on dominant purpose I do not consider that, having regard to the eight matters in s 177D(b), it would be concluded that Mylan or any other of the persons who entered into or caried out the schemes or any part of the schemes did so for the purpose of enabling MAHPL to obtain a tax benefit in connection with the schemes. Of the numerous topics addressed above in relation to those eight matters, only one supports a contrary conclusion: the failure to refinance PN A2 or otherwise revisit the interest rate paid on PN A2. Nevertheless, the authorities recognise that not all matters need to point in one direction, whether the conclusion is that that there was the requisite dominant purpose, or the converse: see, eg, Sleight at [67] (Hill J). Other matters addressed are neutral, or point to purposes other than obtaining a tax benefit in connection with the schemes. It must be recalled that merely obtaining a tax benefit does not satisfy s 177D: Guardian at [207] (Hespe J, Perry and Derrington JJ agreeing). Nor does selecting, from alternative transaction forms, one that has a lower tax cost of itself necessarily take the case within s 177D. It is, as the plurality explained in Spotless Services (at 416), only where the purpose of enabling the obtaining of a tax benefit is the “ruling, prevailing, or most influential purpose†that the requisite conclusion will be reached. In my assessment, MAHPL has established that, assessed objectively (and keeping in mind that the question is not what Mylan’s actual, subjective purpose was), the facts of this case do not attract that conclusion.” Click here for translation ...
Australia vs Minerva Financial Group Pty Ltd, March 2024, Full Federal Court, Case No [2024] FCAFC 28
The Australian Tax Office (ATO) had determined that Minerva had received a “tax benefit” in connection with a “scheme” to which Part IVA – Australian GAAR – applied. Minerva appealed to the Federal Court, which upheld the assessment of the ATO. Mylan then appealed the decision to the Full Federal Court. Judgment of the Full Federal Court The Full Federal Court found in favour of Minerva. Excerpts “121 The s 177D factors are to be considered in light of the counterfactual or other possibilities and the outcomes resulting from the scheme. Part of the difficulty in the present case is that the same commercial outcome for the parties would not have been achieved by a distribution of income to the special unitholder as was achieved by the distribution of income to the ordinary unitholder, putting aside the Australian income tax consequences. Jupiter was indebted to LF and the distributions from MFGT enabled the repayment of that debt. Vesta increased its capital investment in MFGT and increased MFGT’s equity capital base. The premise of the Commissioner’s case was that the failure to distribute to LF deprived LF of retained earnings. That “commercial†outcome was different from the commercial outcome in fact achieved. To adopt the language of Hely J in Macquarie Finance Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation [2005] FCAFC 205; (2005) 146 FCR 77 at [243], the fallacy in this case is that — contrary to the direction in s 177D(2) — it confines attention to the tax consequences of the actual and “counterfactual†transactions and leaves out of account the commercial advantages and consequences obtained by parties connected with the appellant and flowing from what was done. 122 As has been explained, the Commissioner’s case rested upon a comparison between the way in which the finance business was structured in 2007 and the way in which income flows occurred in the relevant years. It assumed, in effect, that there was no objective reason for the change in income flows other than a desire to secure a tax advantage. A case of that kind failed to engage with the unchallenged finding that the restructure in 2007 was not a scheme to which Part IVA applied and the evidence as to the changed commercial circumstances, including the business need for further sources of capital. Those changes had consequences for the role of LF, including as to its sources of income. The appellant was entitled to point to these matters as part of the context in which the objective reasons for the distributions of income from MHT were to be evaluated. 123 At the end of the day, the appellant as trustee of MHT made a distribution of distributable income in accordance with the terms of the MHT trust constitution and the terms on which the units in MHT had been issued. The making of that distribution resulted in MFGT being able to make a distribution to its unitholders which resulted in a real benefit to those unitholders. It was not disputed that a tax benefit had been obtained by the appellant. If distributions had been made differently more Australian tax would have been payable. But the identification of a tax benefit does not answer the question posited by s 177D. Nothing in the surrounding context objectively supports a conclusion that any party to any of the schemes either entered into or carried out any of the schemes for a dominant purpose of enabling the appellant to obtain a tax benefit.” Click here for translation ...
Belgium vs S.E. bv, October 2023, Court of First Instance, Case No. 21/942/A
The taxpayer paid interest on five loans concluded with its Dutch subsidiary (“BV2”) on 31 December 2017, claiming exemption from withholding tax on the basis of the double taxation treaty between Belgium and the Netherlands (Article 11, §3, (a)). The dispute concerns whether the Dutch subsidiary “BV2†can be considered the beneficial owner of these interests. The concept of “beneficial owner” is not defined in the Belgium-Netherlands double tax treaty. However, this concept is also used in the European Directive on interest and royalties. In the Court’s view, this concept must be interpreted in the same way for the application of the Belgian-Dutch double taxation treaty. Indeed, as members of the EU, Belgium and the Netherlands are also obliged to ensure compliance with EU law. The Court noted that, of the five loans on which the taxpayer paid interest to its subsidiary “BV2”, four loans were linked to four other loans granted by a Dutch company higher up in the group’s organisation chart and having the legal form of a “CV” (now an LLC), to the taxpayer’s Dutch parent company, “BV1â€. The fifth loan on which the taxpayer pays interest to its subsidiary “BV2” is clearly linked to a fifth loan granted by the same “CV” (now LLC) to the said subsidiary “BV2”. The taxpayer’s subsidiary “BV2” and its parent company “BV1” together form a tax unit in the Netherlands. At the level of the tax unit, a ruling (“APA-vaststellingsovereenkomst”) has been obtained in the Netherlands, stipulating a limited remuneration for the financing activities that this tax unit carries out for the companies in the group. The “transfer pricing report” attached to the ruling request indicates that a Dutch CV is the lender and that the taxpayer is the final borrower in respect of the loans in question. The “APA-vaststellingsovereenkomst” also clearly shows the link between these various loans. The loans granted by the CV are then transferred to a new Delaware LLC. The mere fact that a tax unit exists between the taxpayer’s subsidiary “BV2” and the parent company “BV1” does not imply ipso facto that the subsidiary “BV2” is a conduit company and therefore does not, in principle, prevent it from being considered a “beneficial owner”. However, a tax unit may be part of an arrangement designed to avoid or evade tax in certain transactions. The tax unity between the subsidiary “BV2” and the parent company “BV1” of the taxpayer has the effect that the interest obtained by the subsidiary “BV2” is offset by the interest paid to the LLC, so that there is virtually no tax to pay on this interest. Furthermore, the taxpayer would not have been able to claim any exemption if he had paid the interest directly to the LLC and if the interposition of the Dutch companies had not been used. In addition to the aforementioned links between the various loans, the Court emphasised the fact that the claims against the taxpayer and the underlying debts were initially held by a single company, that they were then divided between the taxpayer’s Dutch subsidiary “BV2â€Â (claims) and the parent company “BV1â€Â (debts), and then, following a merger between this subsidiary and the parent company, were reunited within the same company (BV 1). According to the court, this also reveals the interlocking nature of these loans, as well as the artificial nature of the construction. It is at least implicit from the above facts that the Dutch subsidiary “BV2” and the parent company “BV1” act only as formal intermediaries and that the final lender is the LLC, which took over the loans from the CV. For the fifth loan, which was financed by the Dutch subsidiary “BV2” directly with the CV (now LCC), it appears that the Dutch company “BV2” has an obligation to pay interest to the CV (now LLC). For the other four loans, significant evidence of actual interest flows was found in the financial statements of the companies concerned. According to the court, the taxpayer had not met his burden of proving that he was the beneficial owner of the interest. The exemption from withholding tax was rightly rejected by the tax authorities on this basis. In addition, the withholding tax must be added to the amount of income for the calculation of the withholding tax (grossing up). Click here for English Translation Click here for other translation ...
The South African Revenue Service (SARS) issues Arm’s Length Guidance on Intra-Group Loans
17 January 2023 the South African Revenue Service (SARS) released an interpretation note titled “DETERMINATION OF THE TAXABLE INCOME OF CERTAIN PERSONS FROM INTERNATIONAL TRANSACTIONS: INTRA-GROUP LOANS†which provides guidance on how SARS will determine arm’s length pricing for intra-group loans. The Note also provides guidance on the consequences for a taxpayer if the amount of debt, the cost of debt or both are not arm’s length. According to the note an intra-group loan would be incorrectly priced if the amount of debt funding, the cost of the debt or both are excessive compared to what is arm’s length ...