SAIM8040 - Annual payments: case law: ‘conditions and counter- stipulations’
The development of case law: ‘conditions and counter-stipulations’
In the light of the concept of ‘pure income profit’
(
SAIM8030), much of the case law on
annual payments has focused on the question of whether payments can
be said to be made in return for something the recipient has
provided, and has incurred expenditure on providing.
The case of CIR v National Book League (37TC455) concerned
covenanted subscriptions to the National Book League, a charity.
Subscribers were entitled to use the club and restaurant facilities
at the League’s London headquarters. The Court of Appeal
found that the payments were not annual payments because they were
not paid ‘without conditions or counter- stipulations’
(a phrase which comes from the Epping Forest case).
But in the later case of Campbell v CIR (45TC427), Lord
Donovan cautioned against taking the idea of ‘without
conditions or counter-stipulations’ too far. An annual
payment need not be - indeed, in most cases, will not be - made out
of pure benevolence. Lord Donovan drew attention to the reference
in what is now ICTA88/S18 (3) to an obligation ‘by virtue of
any contract’, and noted that a contract in its very nature
will require the recipient to
“give or do something in return for the
payment, which will not in such circumstances be ‘pure
bounty’ in his hands.”
For example, annuity payments come to the recipient only
because he or she has first invested a capital sum.
When looking at whether a payment is, or is not, an annual
payment, it is important to look at the context in which it is made
- this comes back to Lord Reid’s remarks in the Epping Forest
case about the quality or nature of the payment (
SAIM8030). This approach is illustrated
by the case of British Commonwealth International Newsfilm Agency
Ltd v Mahany (40TC550), which concerned covenanted payments by the
BBC and the Rank Organisation Ltd into a joint venture company, for
the purpose of making good its trading deficit. The company claimed
repayment of tax on the basis that these were annual payments, but
at every stage - from the Special Commissioners to the House of
Lords - they were held to be trading receipts.
While the company relied extensively on dicta from the Epping
Forest case, arguing that there was no consideration, conditions or
counter-stipulations to the payments, the Lords ruled that these
things were not conclusive. The decision turned on the commercial
context of the payments, particularly the fact that the payer and
payee were traders and without the contributions the company could
not have continued in business.
