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Stewart Fraser Ltd v Revenue & Customs

First-tier Tribunal (Tax)
Jan 12, 2011
Smart Summary (Beta)

Factual and Procedural Background

The Appellant, Company A, is a close company largely family owned. During the relevant period, Mr. Fraser was both a director and the majority shareholder of Company A. HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) opened an enquiry into Company A's accounts for the year ended March 1998 to investigate whether a loan of £113,006 made to Mr. Fraser and disclosed as waived was correctly treated for tax purposes.

HMRC found that several director's loan accounts held by Mr. Fraser had become overdrawn and were subsequently waived: £73,665 for the year ended March 2004 (waived April 2004), £113,006 for the year ended March 2005 (waived November 2005), and £183,047 for the year ended March 2007 (waived June 2007).

While the loan waivers were accepted by Mr. Fraser as income under Section 421 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 (ICTA) and declared in his tax returns, HMRC contended that the waivers constituted profits derived from employment and thus Class 1 National Insurance Contributions (NICs) were payable by Company A. HMRC issued decisions under Section 8 of the Social Security (Transfer of Functions) Act 1999, requiring Company A to pay primary and secondary Class 1 NICs for the tax years 2004/05, 2005/06, and 2007/08.

Company A appealed these decisions, arguing that the loan waivers were made to Mr. Fraser in his capacity as majority shareholder rather than as director, and therefore no Class 1 NICs were due.

Legal Issues Presented

  1. Whether the waiver of loans to Mr. Fraser was made in his capacity as a director (employment) or as the majority shareholder (participator) of Company A.
  2. Whether Class 1 National Insurance Contributions were payable by Company A on the waiver of the loans.

Arguments of the Parties

Appellant's Arguments

  • The loan waivers were not remuneration derived from employment but were made to Mr. Fraser as the majority shareholder.
  • Mr. Fraser received a substantial salary as managing director, which was challenged by a minority shareholder.
  • The waivers were not regular payments like salary or bonuses and were instead payments to the majority shareholder, as directors have no other entitlement to company funds under the Companies Act.
  • The dispute with the minority shareholder prevented dividend payments, so loans were waived instead in Mr. Fraser's capacity as shareholder.
  • Section 419 ICTA is intended to penalise abuse by participators; the overdrawn loan accounts related to Mr. Fraser as participator, not as director.

HMRC's Arguments

  • The loan waivers were profits derived from employment and thus Class 1 NICs were due, even if not assessable as employment income.
  • Section 3(1) of the Social Security Contributions & Benefits Act 1992 (SSCBA) defines earnings to include remuneration or profits from employment.
  • The waivers were treated by Mr. Fraser as income in his tax returns.
  • Section 188 of the Income Tax (Earnings and Pensions) Act 2003 treats loan write-offs as earnings.
  • No evidence supported the claim that waivers were made due to Mr. Fraser’s shareholding rather than employment.
  • Two waivers were approved at directors’ meetings; shareholders were not consulted, and no dividends were paid to other shareholders.
  • The regular waiving of loan balances was a method of augmenting Mr. Fraser’s salary.
  • HMRC referenced their manuals confirming that loan write-offs to directors are treated as earnings liable to Class 1 NICs.
  • The burden of proof rested on Company A to displace the Section 8 decisions.

Table of Precedents Cited

Precedent Rule or Principle Cited For Application by the Court
Shilton v Wilmhurst [1991] BTC 66 Clarification of when payments to office holders or employees constitute taxable profits or emoluments arising from employment. The court applied the test that payments must arise from the office or employment to be assessable; it confirmed that the loan waivers arose from employment.
Hochstrasser v Mayes (1956-1960) 38 TC 673 Definition and test of what constitutes profits or perquisites derived from employment. Referenced to support the principle that payments made in return for acting as an employee are taxable as employment income.

Court's Reasoning and Analysis

The Tribunal analyzed whether the loan waivers were made to Mr. Fraser in his capacity as a director (employment) or as a majority shareholder (participator). It found no evidence supporting the contention that the waivers were made due to shareholding. The minutes of Company A’s Annual General Meeting showed no shareholder consultation or approval for waiving loans as shareholder distributions, and the dividend process was not followed.

The Tribunal noted that the waivers were approved by the directors and were effectively payments arising from Mr. Fraser’s employment. The court relied on statutory provisions and authoritative case law establishing that benefits received by an employee or office holder in return for employment duties are taxable earnings.

The Tribunal also considered HMRC’s references to their manuals, which treat loan write-offs to directors as earnings subject to Class 1 NICs. The court found that the waivers functioned as remuneration augmenting Mr. Fraser’s salary, especially given the reduction in his formal salary during the relevant years.

On balance, the Tribunal concluded that the loan waivers were remuneration arising from employment and thus subject to Class 1 NICs. The Appellant failed to meet the burden of proof to show otherwise.

Holding and Implications

The appeal is DISMISSED, and the decisions under Section 8 of the Social Security (Transfer of Functions) Act 1999 are confirmed.

The direct effect is that Company A remains liable to pay the primary and secondary Class 1 National Insurance Contributions on the waived loans to Mr. Fraser for the tax years in question. No broader precedent was established beyond the application of existing statutory provisions and case law to the facts of this case.