BIM45014 - Specific deductions: entertainment: meaning of business entertainment: no hospitality if sufficient ‘quid pro quo'
‘Quid pro quo’ can be goods or services
A full and sufficient quid pro quo (something of equivalent
value given in return) may take the form of services given, rather
than cash or goods. So long as a trader can demonstrate that
hospitality is given as part of a contractual arrangement in which
services of an equivalent value are provided, then you should not
treat the hospitality as business entertainment.
This principle was confirmed in the case of Customs and
Excise v Kilroy Television Company Ltd (1997STC901). The company
was a producer of television programmes, one of which depended upon
the presence of a studio audience who had volunteered to take part.
Members of the audience were provided with train fares and a buffet
meal before the programme began. The VAT tribunal found that the
value of the service provided by the audience by participating in
the programme was sufficient to cover the cost of food and drink
and so there was no hospitality involved.
The High Court described this finding as surprising (in view
of the fact that there was no contractual obligation to provide the
buffet) but not unreasonable. They said that the correct test was
whether the company had ‘provided the buffet in pursuance of
a legal obligation in return for which it obtains a proper and
sufficient quid pro quo. That quid pro quo may be cash or it may be
goods or services’.
In any case the question of whether the services provided are
a ‘proper and sufficient quid pro quo’ is a question of
fact. However, a purely nominal service (such as the completion of
a questionnaire) is unlikely to provide sufficient value to cover
the cost of the hospitality.
