CA32213 - IBA: Qualifying trade: Meaning of subjection to a process
The question whether goods are subjected to a process is a question of fact. The line you should follow is that goods are subjected to a process where:
- there is a substantial measure of uniformity of treatment, or
- there is a continuous and regular action or succession of actions taking place or carried on in a definite manner.
If you have problems with the question whether goods are being
subjected to a process you may find it helpful to visit the
premises and look at what happens.
The expression subjection of goods to a process was
considered in the following tax cases:
Kilmarnock Equitable Co-operative Society Ltd. v
CIR 42TC675. Here Lord Cameron said
the word 'process' in its ordinary connotation
seems to me to mean no more than the application of a method of
manufacture or adaptation of goods or materials towards a
particular use, purpose, or end, while 'to subject' means no more
than to treat in some manner or other. Kimarnock business
included selling coal in paper bags, both retail and wholesale. It
constructed a building in which it screened and packed the coal and
claimed IBA on the grounds that goods were subjected to a process
in it. The company's claim succeeded.
Buckingham v Securitas Properties Ltd. 53TC292. In
that case the subjection of goods to a process was held to be:
- a continuous and regular action or succession of actions taking place or carried on in a definite manner; or
- a continuous (natural or artificial) operation or series of operations.
Securitas Properties claimed IBA on a building in which they
stored coins and notes and made up wage packets because they
claimed that the repetitious nature of sorting the notes and coins
and filling the wage packets was a process. Their IBA claim was
refused on the grounds that although the coins and notes were
subjected to a process they were held as currency and so were not
goods or materials.
Vibroplant Ltd. v Holland 54TC658. In his judgment
Dillon J stressed the need for substantial uniformity of treatment
of each item for there to be a process. Vibroplant owned plant and
machinery, which it hired out. It claimed IBA on the buildings in
which it stored the plant when it was not hired out and carried on
repair and maintenance work. The claim was refused on the grounds
that each item of equipment was treated on an individual basis: the
uniformity of treatment needed for o a process was missing.
Legislation has been introduced to overturn this. Repair and
maintenance is now a qualifying trade apart from the maintenance
and repair of goods by a person who uses those goods in a trade
that is not a qualifying trade
CA32220.
Girobank plc v Clarke 70TC387. This case showed
that subjection of goods to a process was not limited to processes
of an industrial character and that it was not necessary for the
goods or materials to be altered for there to be a process but
there should be a substantial measure of uniformity of treatment.
Girobank constructed a building in which it processed cheques and
other documents. It claimed IBA on the building. The Special
Commissioners, the High Court and the Court of Appeal refused its
IBA claim. The cheques and other documents were not goods or
materials. In this case the phrase subjection to a process was
interpreted widely. In the High Court Lindsay J said that
subjecting goods to a process was not limited to processes of an
industrial character in that it is not necessary that something is
made by the process or that the operations had to be carried out
wholly or mainly by machine. He also said that a process did not
need to alter the goods or materials subjected to it in any way. It
was enough that the goods were cleaned, sorted or packaged but that
there should be a substantial measure of uniformity of treatment.
Bestway (Holdings) Ltd. v Luff 70TC512. This case
showed that not every treatment of goods or materials constitutes
the subjection of goods to a process. There should be a uniform
treatment or system of treatment of some real significance. The
Bestway group operated cash and carry warehouses where it sold
goods wholesale. IBA was claimed on the warehouses on the grounds
that the unpacking, checking, labelling, repackaging and electronic
scanning of goods was the subjection of goods to a process. The
claim was refused. Bestway's activities were mere preliminaries to
sale, which were of no substantial significance.
None of the cases above gave a complete definition of the
expression but they all give useful guidance.
