Raulin Amy
Partner | Legal
Jersey
Partner
Jersey
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This briefing covers both (i) the general position under Jersey legislation and a consideration of the previous case law relating to management and control of Jersey companies and (ii) an evaluation of a UK tax case involving three Jersey companies which is relevant to local service providers.
The principal Jersey tax statute is the Income Tax (Jersey) Law 1961 (the Income Tax Law) which determines the rate of Jersey income tax payable by Jersey companies.
A company will be Jersey tax resident for the purposes of the Income Tax Law if it is incorporated in Jersey or, if incorporated elsewhere, its business is managed and controlled in Jersey. The general rate of tax is 0% (subject to some local exceptions).
Notwithstanding the general rule that Jersey incorporated companies are treated as Jersey tax resident, the Income Tax Law states that a Jersey incorporated company will be entitled to be regarded as exclusively tax resident elsewhere if its business is managed and controlled in a jurisdiction other than Jersey, it is tax resident in that jurisdiction and the highest rate of corporate income tax in that jurisdiction is 10% or higher.
For Jersey and English purposes tax residency is broadly determined by reference to where an entity's central management and control abides, being the location where the high-level strategic decisions of the company are made. The principles of management and control in Jersey are the same as those in the UK so English case law is very relevant. However, as set out below, there are other considerations to bear in mind and factors which influence where management and control is deemed to be located.
The English law case of Wood v Holden confirmed that all board meetings should be held and all decisions and resolutions should be made in Jersey to ensure that a Jersey entity's tax residency remains in Jersey as a matter of English tax law.
In the English case of Laerstate, the First Tier Tribunal (FTT) held that a company's residency cannot be established merely on the basis of the location of board meetings. The FTT found that a company should be resident in the place that it had been doing all its real business, including contract negotiations and obtaining its advice. In Laerstate the FTT found that this was within the UK, which made the company tax resident in the UK. The following guidelines were raised:
Development Securities (No.9) Ltd (DSL) set up three Jersey subsidiaries to participate in a tax planning arrangement on the recommendation of a major accounting firm. The Jersey companies were to acquire certain assets at more than their market value via the use of call options which could be exercised once certain conditions were met. This structure was intended to increase the capital losses that were available to the DSL group whilst protecting against allegations that the transactions were preordained.
At face value the acquisitions did not make commercial sense for the Jersey subsidiaries. However, they did make commercial sense for DSL on the basis that any capital loss (when set off against any capital gain) could be deducted from the group's tax liabilities, reducing the amount DSL would have to pay in corporation tax.
To allow the Jersey subsidiaries – special purpose vehicles (SPVs) incorporated solely to participate in the scheme – to purchase the assets at an uneconomically high value, the parent made a capital contribution to the subsidiaries. For the scheme to be effective, the SPVs had to be Jersey tax resident at the time the acquisitions took place. Once the structure had been implemented the Jersey directors resigned and the SPVs became UK tax resident. In theory each such tax migration would avoid any stamp duty or corporation tax accruing and reduce the overall level of tax each company would have to pay as a result of the capital losses.
HMRC rejected the scheme, arguing that the Jersey subsidiaries had always been tax resident in the UK since their central management and control took place there, rather than in Jersey, despite their directors being Jersey-based. DSL appealed to the FTT, which took HMRC's side, agreeing that the Jersey subsidiaries were centrally managed and controlled in the UK, where their sole shareholder was based. It followed that, in the FTT's view, the companies were UK tax resident at the time they took the decision to acquire certain assets for a price well in excess of their fair market value.
DSL appealed the FTT's decision and the Upper-Tier Tax Tribunal (the UT) accepted the appeal in 2019. The UT concluded that the Jersey directors had acted properly in taking into account the interests of its sole shareholder when deciding to enter into the disputed transactions. The SPVs had no employees and the transactions did not prejudice creditors. The UT added that given the keenness of the parent company to enter into the transactions, it would take a 'factor of some significance' – such as the scheme being illegal (which it was not) – to overturn the desire of a sole shareholder.
Following the ruling from the UT, HMRC appealed the case to the England and Wales Court of Appeal (the CA). In December 2020, the CA upheld the appeal on technical grounds, ruling that the UT had mischaracterised the reasons for the initial FTT decision. The primary reason for the FTT ruling in favour of HMRC had, in the CA's view, been that the Jersey director of the SPVs had followed the 'instructions' of their parent to enter into the transaction 'without any engagement with the substantive decision'.
It should be noted that Development Securities is a case with very specific facts, relating to a complex tax scheme rather than the day-to-day management of a business. Even in that context one of the CA judges, Lord Justice Nugee, had 'very significant reservations' regarding the FTT's decision, which he felt was without precedent in finding that a Jersey board of directors who 'had actually met, had understood what they were being asked to do, had understood why they were being asked to do it, had decided it was lawful, had reviewed for itself the transactional documents, [and] had been found not to have acted mindlessly' had nonetheless been found not be exercising central management and control from Jersey. As DSL had not appealed this element of the FTT's decision, the CA was not able to overturn the FTT's findings on this point. In contrast, we note that the decision in Wood v Holden, discussed above, was endorsed by each of the FTT, the UT and the CA and sets a clear test for what a Jersey company should do from an English tax law perspective to ensure that it remains tax resident in Jersey.
The Supreme Court declined to hear a further appeal from DSL in late 2021, and in doing so passed up the opportunity of providing clearer guidance on tax residency. It is yet to be seen whether a future case may offer more clarity.
The Development Securities case again flags the importance of normal safeguards Jersey service providers and advisers are used to ensuring are in place, including a proper composition of a non-UK company’s board of directors, protecting the genuine autonomy of that board, and ensuring that all decisions in relation to the business strategy and activities of the company are taken at meetings of the board outside the UK. However, albeit that it is an extreme case, it goes further in highlighting several other considerations:
The CA's decision also serves as a timely reminder that Jersey resident directors cannot provide a purely "administrative" service for the benefit of the parent owner but each director carries all the duties and responsibilities of a director generally and as such must ensure that they have sufficient knowledge and understanding of the business of the company.
Raulin Amy
Partner | Legal
Jersey
Partner
Jersey
Bruce MacNeil
Partner | Legal
Jersey
Partner
Jersey
Matthew Shaxson
Group Partner, Ogier Legal L.P. | Legal
Jersey
Group Partner, Ogier Legal L.P.
Jersey
James Fox
Partner | Legal
Jersey
Partner
Jersey
Alex Fisher
Senior Associate | Legal
Jersey
Senior Associate
Jersey
Ogier is a professional services firm with the knowledge and expertise to handle the most demanding and complex transactions and provide expert, efficient and cost-effective services to all our clients. We regularly win awards for the quality of our client service, our work and our people.
This client briefing has been prepared for clients and professional associates of Ogier. The information and expressions of opinion which it contains are not intended to be a comprehensive study or to provide legal advice and should not be treated as a substitute for specific advice concerning individual situations.
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