On 12 February 2015 the EU extended one of the exemptions from restrictive measures against Iran until 30 June 2015, by way of Council Regulation (EU) 2015/229. The exemption relates to the execution of obligations provided for in contracts concluded before 23 January 2012, or in ancillary contracts, where the supply of Iranian crude oil, petroleum products or petrochemical products, or the proceeds derived from their supply, are for the reimbursement to EU persons or entities of outstanding amounts.
The EU also relisted two entities based on new statements of reasons, by way of Council Implementing Regulation (EU) 2015/230. They are:
On 5 February 2015 the Court of Appeal held that ss 4(2) (which disapplies the exception to immunity created by s. 4(1) where an individual is not habitually resident in the UK at the time the employment contract is made) and 16(1)(a) (immunity in cases concerning embassy or consular employment disputes) of the State Immunity Act 1978 were incompatible with Article 6 ECHR and Article 47 of the EU Charter (right to a fair trial).
The case concerned two Moroccan nationals employed at the Sudanese and Libyan embassies respectively. They brought claims for unfair dismissal, non-payment of the minimum wage, unpaid wages, breach of the Working Time Regulations 1998, racial discrimination and harassment. The question was whether such claims were barred by state immunity.
The Court of Appeal held that:
On 12 February 2015 the General Court handed down its judgment in Akhras, a key sanctions case.
Akhras concerned a challenge to Mr Akhras’ listing pursuant to the EU’s restrictive measures against Syria. Mr Akhras was originally listed in 2011 and subsequently relisted in 2012 and 2013 for being a “[p]rominent businessman benefiting from and supporting the regime” in Syria.
The General Court held that:
On 10 February 2015 HMRC published a brief on the application of the decision of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) in Case C-7/13 Skandia America Corp. (USA), filial Sverige v. Skatteverket of 17 September 2014 for VAT group rules in the UK.
Skandia America was US-incorporated with a Swedish branch, which became part of a Swedish VAT group. The Swedish tax authority viewed services provided by Skandia America to its Swedish branch as taxable transactions. Skandia disagreed on the grounds that these were intra-company transactions and consequently not supplies for VAT purposes. The matter was referred to the CJEU. The CJEU stated that under the Swedish grouping provisions only the branch that was physically located in Sweden could belong to a Swedish VAT group, and so it was different from the taxable person of the US head office. The transactions between the US head office and the Swedish branch were therefore liable to VAT.
Under the UK’s VAT grouping provisions, a company must have an establishment in the UK to join a UK VAT group. However, unlike in Sweden, the whole body corporate is part of the VAT group, not just the establishment (branch or head office) in the UK. Services provided between an overseas establishment and a UK establishment of the body are not normally supplies for UK VAT purposes, as they are transactions within the same taxable person.
Consequently, an overseas establishment of a UK-established entity is part of a separate taxable person if the overseas establishment is VAT-grouped in a member state that operates similar “establishment only” grouping provisions to Sweden. Intra-entity services provided to or by such establishments are supplies made to or by another taxable person and must account for VAT accordingly:
If the UK entity is in a UK VAT group, the same applies to supplies between the overseas establishment and other UK VAT group members in UK. Here, the anti-avoidance legislation in ss 43(2A)-(2E) of the VAT Act 1994 does not also apply, as the overseas establishment is not seen as part of the UK VAT group.
Revenue and Customs Brief 2 (2015): VAT grouping rules and the Skandia judgment
It has been widely reported that Lukoil, Russia’s second largest oil company, has commenced arbitration proceedings in the London Court of International Arbitration (LCIA) against China’s Sinopec over an uncompleted $1.2 billion deal.
The parties had entered into a sale-purchase agreement whereby Lukoil would sell to Sinopec 50% of a company involved in various Kazakh hydrocarbon production projects, Caspian Investment Resources Ltd. It is reported that Lukoil considers Sinopec in breach of contract over the uncompleted deal.
On 23 January 2015, in consideration of the State Immunity Act 1978 (“SIA”) the Commercial Court (Hamblen J) set aside two without notice orders allowing service of an arbitration claim form on the defendant.
The claimants and the defendant were parties to ongoing LCIA arbitration proceedings in London, pursuant to a contractual arbitration clause. The tribunal had ordered the defendants to pay US$100 million to the claimants within 30 days of the date of the order, otherwise the order would be peremptory. As the defendants did not pay, the tribunal permitted the claimants to apply for enforcement of the order under s. 42 of the Arbitration Act 1996 (“the 1996 Act”). The claimants’s solicitors (Freshfields) wrote to the defendant’s solicitors (WilmerHale) asking for confirmation that they were authorised to accept service on behalf of the defendant. WilmerHale responded saying Freshfields’ request was premature. In anticipation of permission being granted by the tribunal the claimants issued an application notice for an order for permission to serve the arbitration claim form on WilmerHale. That application was granted. This first order was sent to WilmerHale following the tribunal’s grant of permission the same day. It was accompanied by the arbitration claim form requesting the court to order the defendant to comply with the tribunal’s peremptory order and an affidavit from Freshfields in support of that application. On the same day the claimants issued their without notice application for the second order.
There followed correspondence between WilmerHale and Freshfields in which the applicability of the SIA and the failure to disclose this to the court was raised and debated. (It was agreed that the defendant was a constituent territory of a federal state for the purposes of s. 14(5) SIA). WilmerHale sent copies of that correspondence to the court but it does not appear to have been placed before Flaux J before he made the order. Freshfields did not forward that correspondence to the court until after the order was made, although on that same day it had written to the Commercial Court Listing Office contending that s. 12 SIA did not apply. The defendant subsequently issued the present application and filed an acknowledgment of service, indicating its intention to dispute the court’s jurisdiction pursuant to CPR r. 11(2).
The issues before the court were as follows:
PCL & Ors v The Y Regional Government of X [2015] EWHC 68 (Comm), 23 January 2015
It has recently been reported that the EU is working on a list of new entities and Russian and pro-Moscow Ukrainian individuals who will be affected by sanctions. The names have not yet been made available.
From the Council’s Register of Documents it is evident that the following exist, though their contents have not yet been made public:
On 26 January 2015 Henderson J handed down his judgment on various computation issues in the Prudential test case in the CFC & Dividend GLO. Following judgment on liability in October 2013, HMRC had raised a number of computation arguments seeking to reduce the value of Prudential’s claim which led to a further hearing in October 2014. Many of these defences were conceded by HMRC at the beginning of that hearing. In all other respects Henderson J’s judgment of last week found in favour of the taxpayer’s method of computation. These concern how to compute the credit which, to be compatible with EU law, should have been available to set against tax on dividend income and ACT where the dividends were from portfolio investments in both EU and non-EU companies and how those credits should be applied.
Henderson J also held that Prudential was entitled to recover compound interest on claims brought in years in which HMRC has on-going enquiries (open years), and not just claims in respect of closed periods. HMRC had conceded this point during the course of the hearing.
The Prudential Assurance Company Limited v HMRC [2015] EWHC 118 (Ch), 26 January 2015
On 29 and 30 January 2015 the EU published updates to its sanctions regimes for Ukraine and Tunisia respectively.
In respect of Ukraine, the update consists of a clarification of the designation criteria for the asset-freezing measures aimed at individuals alleged to be responsible for the misappropriation of Ukrainian State funds. The Council has published the updated Council Regulation (EU) 2015/138 and Council Decision (CFSP) 2015/143. These instruments state that persons identified as responsible for the misappropriation of Ukrainian State funds include persons subject to investigation by the Ukrainian authorities:
In respect of Tunisia, the asset-freezing measures currently in force have been extended until 31 January 2016, and the statements of reasons for three of the listed individuals have been amended. The updated instruments are Council Implementing Regulation (EU) 2015/147 and Council Decision (CFSP) 2015/157. The new reasons for listing the three persons in question (Moncef Trabelsi, Mohamed Trabelsi and Faouzi Ben Ali, all now deceased) are as follows:
Person (deceased) whose activities are subject to judicial investigations by the Tunisian authorities for complicity in the misappropriation of public monies by a public office-holder, complicity in the misuse of office by a public office-holder to procure an unjustified advantage for a third party and to cause a loss to the administration, and complicity in exerting wrongful influence over a public office-holder with a view to obtaining directly or indirectly an advantage for another person.
The Court of Justice of the European Union (“CJEU”) delivered its judgment today in Case C-172/13 Commission v UK. You will recall that the Commission referred the UK to the CJEU, claiming that the 2006 amendments to the UK’s group relief legislation had failed to implement properly the judgment in Case C-446/03 Marks and Spencer. The Commission argued that the amended legislation, in fact, precluded UK resident companies from obtaining relief for the losses of an overseas subsidiary. Further, the Commission argued that because the amended legislation required the “no possibilities test” (created by the CJEU’s judgment in Marks and Spencer) to be determined at the end of the accounting period in which the losses arose, it was virtually impossible for the test to be satisfied.
In her Opinion in October last year, Advocate General Kokott recommended that the “no possibilities test” be abandoned on the basis that ascertaining whether losses might be available for surrender in future periods created too many procedural difficulties. Accordingly, AG Kokott’s view was that the UK’s amendments to its rules on group relief went beyond that required by EU law, as they allowed for the possibility of cross-border relief in certain cases.
Today the CJEU, whilst not following AG Kokott’s suggestion that the “no possibilities test” is overruled, dismissed the action as the Commission was unable to prove its case. This means that the UK’s group relief legislation at issue has been found to be compliant with EU law.
The Commission’s argument that the UK legislation required the loss making subsidiary to be liquidated before the end of the accounting period in which the losses arose was rejected. The Court considered that the legislation did not impose such a requirement, accepting the UK’s example that relief may be obtained where, immediately after the end of the relevant accounting period, the subsidiary ceases trading and sells or disposes of all its income producing assets. Further commentary was provided on the “no possibilities test” by the CJEU. They indicated that for losses of a non-resident subsidiary to be classed as definitive (and to meet the “no possibilities test”) the subsidiary must not have any income. This was clarified as meaning that if the subsidiary is in receipt of even minimal income, it is possible that losses may be utilised in the future in the overseas Member State.
The second complaint of the Commission was that the UK legislation at issue precluded cross-border group relief for the period before 1 April 2006. This argument failed on the grounds that the Commission did not establish the necessary evidence to prove their case, and was not discussed in detail.