12 September 2019
In the recent case of Rossendale Borough Council v Hurstwood Properties (A) Ltd [2019] EWCA Civ 364, the Court of Appeal decided on matters pertaining to the piercing of the corporate veil in connection with two schemes where the claimant local authorities sought to recover National Non-Domestic Rates (NNDR) from the defendant property developers.
The case has re-opened the discussion on the limited applicability of the doctrine of piercing the corporate veil in a new context (ie of tackling tax avoidance). This doctrine, however, is so closely connected with the doctrine of a company's separate legal personality – regarded as the foundation of English company and insolvency law – that the Court of Appeal judges were not prepared to rule in favour of the claimants.
The local authorities sought to recover NNDR related to unoccupied hereditaments from the defendants, who were either the freehold or leasehold proprietors of the properties and had granted leases to special purpose vehicle companies (SPVs).
The SPVs were then placed in voluntary liquidation to avoid paying NNDR, or were struck off the register of companies as dormant companies and thus dissolved. The claims for the recovery of NNDR made against the developers were on the basis that they held the ultimate freehold or leasehold titles.
NNDR is payable when, at the relevant time:
The grant of the leases to the SPVs brought the properties within the ambit of the exclusion clause. The local authorities lost at first instance and appealed to the Court of Appeal on two grounds:
This article focuses on the second of these issues.
The local authorities argued that the corporate veil of the SPVs should be pierced as the companies had been interposed for the sole purpose of avoiding a charge, which was "an act of impropriety" designed to avoid a legal obligation. The results of piercing the veil would be that:
Richards LJ, who gave the leading judgment, referred extensively to Prest v Petrodel Resources Ltd [2013] UKSC 34. He noted that:
Richards LJ concluded that of the above, only the evasion principle might be relevant. However, he also dismissed this on the basis that:
Tax avoidance is certainly an issue which local authorities have been trying to tackle for many years.
However, the judge recognised that even if views may differ on whether the schemes were "socially reprehensible", the claimants sought to tackle them by coming up against a treasured principle of English law. The Court of Appeal stood by the "unyielding rock" on which company law is constructed – ie that "a legally incorporated company must be treated like any other independent person" (Salomon v Salomon & Co Ltd [1897] AC 22).
Rossendale Borough Council v Hurstwood Properties (A) Ltd [2019] EWCA Civ 364