Monday, 13 December 2010

National Transport Authority v Mauritius Secondary Industry Limited

[2010] UKPC 31
Privy Council Appeal No 0006 of 2010

JUDGMENT
  
National Transport Authority
v 
Mauritius Secondary Industry Limited

From the Supreme Court of Mauritius

before 

Lord Hope
Lord Walker
Lord Mance
Lord Collins
Lord Clarke



JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY

Lord Walker

on

13 December 2010

Heard on 25 October 2010


Appellant
Philip Baker QC
Rajeshsharma Ramloll
Miss Hui-Ling McCarthy
(Instructed by Royds LLP) 

Respondent
Sir Hamid Moollan QC
Nandkishore Ramburn
Anwar Moollan
(Instructed by Simons Muirhead & Burton)

LORD WALKER :
1.                 The appellant National Transport Authority (“NTA”), the defendant at first instance, became the lessee of part of an office building at Cassis, Port Louis, under a lease agreement dated 8 February 2000.  The lease was granted after a tender process overseen by the Central Tender Board (“CTB”) a statutory body regulating public procurement established by the Central Tender Board Act 1994 (since repealed).  The landlord who made the successful tender was Mauritius Secondary Industry Ltd (“MSI”), the respondent before the Board and the plaintiff at first instance. The relevant tender notice (with full particulars of NTA’s requirement for office accommodation of about 3,000 square metres) was issued by CTB on 12 November 1998; MSI’s tender (expressed in square feet, not square metres) was submitted on 25 November 1998; and after an inspection and appraisal by a government valuer MSI’s tender was accepted by a letter dated 29 July 1999 from the officer in charge of NTA.
2.                 These dates are of some significance because in 1998 Mauritius introduced value added tax (“VAT”).  The Value Added Tax Act 1998 (“the 1998 Act”) came into force for preliminary purposes (such as registration of taxable persons) on 1 July 1998, and it came fully into force on the appointed day, 7 September 1998.  So VAT was very much a novelty in Mauritius when the tender notice was issued.  MSI was registered under Part IV of the 1998 Act very promptly, on the appointed day itself.  But some of the evidence given at first instance suggests that at the material time some officials and businessmen had not yet fully understood the scheme and implications of the new tax.  
3.                 The rent proposed in MSI’s tender was “Rs15/- per [sq] ft per month, indexed at inflation rate every two years, not to exceed 10%”.  The acceptance letter stated that the government valuer had assessed the net rental surface area at 31,707 sq ft.  These were the figures used in the lease to produce (clause 1.1) a monthly rental of Rs 475,605, although for some unexplained reason the inflation limit was specified (clause 1.4) at 20%.  Neither the lease, nor any earlier document produced in evidence in the proceedings, made any reference to VAT.  There was some rather confused evidence about oral exchanges before the lease was entered into; the judge’s findings on these are considered below.
4.                 That is, in brief summary, the background to the single issue that arises on this appeal: given (as explained below) that MSI was a taxable person and the letting was a taxable supply for VAT purposes, was the monthly rent of Rs 475,605 inclusive, or exclusive, of VAT?  That issue depends ultimately on the terms of the contract made between the parties.  In the English case of Lancaster v Bird (1998) 73Con LR 22, 26,
Chadwick LJ referred to two earlier first-instance cases as illustrating
“What might be thought to be self-evident, that the question whether or not the price for a building contract is inclusive or exclusive of value added tax must turn on the terms of the particular contract.”
The same principle applies to a contract for letting immovable property.  But where the written contract is completely silent, the court must examine the characteristics of the VAT charge which is the subject matter of the dispute.  In terms of the Code Civil (Article 1158) it must look for “le sens qui convient le plus à la matière du contrat.”
5.                 It is common ground that the 1998 Act is modelled on the Value Added Tax Act 1994 of the United Kingdom (“the 1994 UK Act”). The 1994 UK Act consolidated legislation originally introduced as the Finance Act 1972, after the United Kingdom first joined the European Economic Community.  Since then its VAT legislation has had the effect of transposing into domestic law the provisions of successive Community Directives, and in particular (since 2006) Directive 2006/112/EC.  The 1998 Act does not however reproduce every feature of the United Kingdom legislation.  In particular, it provides for “the grant, assignment or surrender of any interest in or right over land” to be a supply of goods (section 4 and Third Schedule, para 2). This is in contrast to the complicated provisions about land transactions introduced into the United Kingdom legislation in 1989 (see Wynn Realisations Ltd (in administration) v Vogue Holdings Inc [1999] STC 524, 526.
6.                 For present purposes the most relevant provisions of the 1998 Act are those which set out the general scheme of VAT, and define or explain its essential terms: “taxable person” in section 1, “supply” in section 4, the charging provisions in sections 9 and 10, and “value” of taxable supplies in section 12.  The most crucial of these provisions are as follows:
“9. Charge to value added tax
(1)            VAT shall be charged on any supply of goods or services made in Mauritius, where it is a taxable supply made by a taxable person in the course or furtherance of any business carried on by him.
(2)            VAT on any taxable supply is a liability of the person making the supply and becomes due at the time of supply.
. . .
10.  Rate of VAT
VAT shall be charged at the rate specified in the Fourth Schedule [10% at the material time] and shall be charged –
(a) on any taxable supply by reference to the value of the supply as determined under section 12 . . .
   12.  Value of taxable supplies
(1)            For the purposes of this Act, the value of any taxable supply made by a taxable person shall, subject to the other provisions of this Act, be determined in accordance with the provisions of this section.
(2)            If the supply is for a consideration in money, its value shall be taken to be such amount as, with the addition of the VAT chargeable, is equal to the consideration.”
The corresponding provisions in the 1994 UK Act are section 4(1) (read with section 1(1)), section 1(2), section 2(1) and section 19(1) and (2) respectively.
7.                 In considering these provisions there are two interlocking points to be borne in mind.  First, it is the person making the supply who is liable for VAT on the value of the supply that he makes.  The ultimate burden of the tax falls on the consumer, but he is not personally liable for it to the Commissioner for Value Added Tax.  The ultimate burden falls on the consumer simply because he is not acquiring it as a taxable person for use in a business of his own, and so there is no question of his passing on the burden by making supplies and obtaining a credit under section 21 of the 1998 Act.  In this case MSI was a taxable person making a taxable supply in the course of its business, and NTA was in the position of the consumer.  NTA was not liable for VAT to the Commissioner. Nor was it liable for VAT to MSI, except so far as the consideration which MSI was entitled to receive from NTA expressly excluded, or simply had to be treated as including, that VAT.  This point was explained by Chadwick LJ in Lancaster v Bird (1998) 73 Con LR 22, 26, in a passage immediately following that already quoted:
“Normally of course it will be made clear expressly.  It is in the interests of the builder who will be receiving the price to make it clear because, as between the builder and the Commissioners for Customs and Excise, the provisions now found in section 19(1) and (2) of the Value Added Tax Act 1994 require the recipient to account for value added tax on the basis that the consideration that he receives is such amount as equals the value of the goods or services provided plus value added tax.  So if the builder fails to make it plain to the employer that he is stipulating for payment of value added tax in addition to the contract price, he will be left to account to the Revenue for the value added tax out of what he receives.”
That applies, mutatis mutandis, to the present case.
8.                 Secondly, the provisions of section 12(1) and (2) are important because they explain how to ascertain the value of a supply, which is the amount on which VAT is to be charged at the appropriate rate (10% at the material time).  Its effect can be stated by the formula S + 1/10S = C, where S is the value of the supply and C is the consideration.  That is the case whether the supplier stipulates for an inclusive price (say Rs110,000) or for a basic price (say Rs100,000) “plus VAT”.  In either case the total consideration that the customer pays is Rs110,000, and so long as the rate of VAT remains at 10%, the formula embodied in section 12(2) produces the correct result.  The function of section 12(2) is not to define “consideration”. The amount of the consideration is to be found by ascertaining the total that the customer actually pays for the supply. Then one must work back through the formula (recasting it, for simplicity, as S = 10/11 C) to find the amount on which VAT is payable at 10%.
9.                 It is now appropriate to return to the facts of MSI’s claim against NTA.  The lease agreement dated 28 February 2000 was for a term of three years from 16 January 2000, with an option to renew for further periods of two years.  The lease was renewed for two years from 16 January 2003 “on the same terms and conditions as the existing agreement” and there is therefore a total of five years’ monthly instalments of VAT at stake.  On 6 March 2000 MSI put in a rent invoice claiming Rs 713,407.50 for half of January and the whole of February 2000, together with VAT of Rs 71,340.75, making a total of Rs 784,748.25.  This was not paid and correspondence ensued.  NTA referred the matter to CTB, which in June 2000 took the view that the rent must be treated as inclusive of VAT.  MSI commenced proceedings against NTA on 23 February 2001 and the case was heard by Peeroo J on 7 October 2004.
10.             MSI called two witnesses, Mr Ramtoola, a director of the plaintiff company, and Mr Kinoo, the government valuer who had inspected and appraised the premises.  NTA called Mr Jhummun, one of its administrative officers.  Mr Ramtoola gave the following evidence in chief (Record p32, ll 17-27), 
“A: Now, the Valuation Office gave its clearance to the Central Tender Board that the [rent] which was determined was a fair one.
 Q: Was that Rs15 per sq ft, inclusive or exclusive of VAT?
 A: In our mind, it was exclusive of VAT, My Lady.
 Q: In the mind of the Valuation Office, was it inclusive or exclusive of VAT as far as you know, when you talked to them?
 A:  It was exclusive of VAT. 
 Q:  That was at all times for entering into this agreement the view that Rs15 per sq ft were exclusive of VAT?
 A: That’s correct, My Lady.”
But in re-examination his evidence was that VAT had not been discussed either with NTA (p45, l.30 – p46 l.3) or with the valuer (p47 ll.6-17).  So it is hard to see how Mr Ramtoola could possibly have known what was in the mind of the Valuation Office.  
11.             The evidence of Mr Kinoo, the valuer, took a rather similar course.  In chief, he agreed with a blatantly leading question that any VAT was to be “paid thereon” – that is, apparently, paid on top of the rent (p48, ll 20-22).  But he had already agreed (p48, ll 6-9) that he did not address himself to the question of VAT at all, and in crossexamination (p49, ll 11-16) he agreed that VAT was not something as to which his department enquired, and that there had been no enquiry in this case.  
12.             The judge handed down a reserved judgment on 3 March 2005, dismissing MSI’s claim with costs.  She carefully considered the oral and documentary evidence and concluded, in relation to the valuer’s visit, that “VAT was not an issue that was brought up and considered, and that the question whether the plaintiff company was VAT registered or not was not canvassed either.”  As to a suggestion that MSI had been misinformed that NTA was exempt from VAT, she observed “that it has not been established by the plaintiff company by way of cogent evidence that there was such an exchange of information before the bid was made or at least before the contract was signed.” (There may have been some confusion about what was meant by ‘exempt’; as already mentioned, NTA was not a taxable person but the practical consequence was that it did not make taxable supplies and so could not pass on VAT which it paid).  The judge’s general and most important conclusion on the facts was that “the evidence on record shows clearly that there was no mention of VAT at all throughout the negotiation of the contract.”
13.             The judge referred to two English authorities, Lancaster v Bird already mentioned and Hostgilt Ltd v Megahart Ltd [1999] STC 141.  In the latter case (concerning a “VAT excluded” clause in a contract) the deputy judge said, at p145, 
“This construction is, of course, only possible because there is express reference, albeit rather badly drafted, as to how VAT is proposed to be dealt with.  If there were no mention at all of VAT then the sums quoted would simply be the consideration for the purchase and it would be a matter for the vendor to sort out the VAT liability on his own.”
She also (at p143) went through the exercise described in para 8 above, but with more complicated fractions because in that case the VAT rate was 17.5 per cent.
14.             Following that guidance, Peeroo J concluded that under both lease agreements MSI had no claim on NTA for any further payment in respect of VAT.  In the Board’s opinion Peeroo J’s judgment was considered, thorough, and clearly right.  The only criticism that could be made of her conduct of the case was that she allowed counsel to get away with too many leading questions in examination in chief and reexamination.  However the Court of Appeal (Yeung Sik Yuen CJ and Angoh J) reversed her decision in a reserved judgment handed down on 5 June 2009.
15.             The Court of Appeal noted that there were eight grounds of appeal.  It considered that the first four raised issues of law, and the next four raised issues of fact.  It appears to the Board that only two could really be described as issues of fact: the valuer’s alleged acceptance that he recommended a rent exclusive of VAT, and NTA’s alleged awareness (at some unspecified time) that the rent was exclusive of VAT.  On these points the Court of Appeal did not clearly depart from any of the judge’s findings of fact.  It did refer to a letter dated 6 March 2000 (five weeks after the signing of the lease agreement) from a director of MSI referring to a conversation between MSI’s accountant and NTA’s financial officer.  The date of the conversation is not specified but it seems likely that it occurred quite shortly before (or even on) 6 March 2000.  It seems inherently improbable that it took place before the lease agreement was signed.  It is no ground for disturbing the judge’s finding that it had not been established by cogent evidence that there was any relevant exchange of information before the lease agreement was signed.  There is therefore no reason to disturb her findings of fact.
16.             As to the law, the Court of Appeal discussed the 1998 Act and saw it as an essential part of the structure of VAT that
“It is the end user who usually meets the final payment of that tax.”
The Court returned to the same point later in the judgment:
“We are of the view that the facts highlighted above predominantly point towards the existence of an underlying agreement whereby VAT is ultimately borne by the end-user, namely [NTA].”  
The facts to which the Court referred were (1) that the transaction was agreed to have been liable to VAT, (2) that MSI claimed VAT at the first opportunity, (3) that NTA’s response was that NTA was not liable for VAT, (4) that NTA did not at once advance its case that the payment of rent must be inclusive of VAT and (5) that Mr Kinoo, the valuer, agreed that he did not address himself to VAT. The Board respectfully consider that these five points are no basis for the Court of Appeal’s conclusion.  Point (1) is neutral; point (2) shows no more than that MSI’s accountant was aware of VAT, even if those of its staff involved in the negotiations were not; points (3) and (4) are neutral – VAT was a very new tax, and NTA (not being a taxable person) was naturally not as familiar with it as MSI; point (5) is consistent with the judge’s most important finding of fact, that VAT was simply not thought about before the lease agreement was entered into.
17.             The Board also respectfully considers that the Court of Appeal may have misunderstood the point about the ultimate burden of VAT falling on the consumer as end user.  That is an important point about the structure of VAT as “fiscally neutral” as between different ways in which the manufacture, distribution and retail sale of products (or the supply of services) can be organised.  But it results from the consumer’s inability to obtain a credit and so to pass on the burden of VAT that he bears as part of the consideration paid by him to the supplier; not from his personal liability for the supplier’s VAT as such, because there is no such liability.
18.             In the Board’s view the principle to be applied in Mauritius is the same as that clearly spelled out in the English authorities already referred to, which the Board accepts as correct.  Moreover, VAT is a tax imposed throughout the European Union, and the same principle has been stated more than once by the Conseil d’Etat, for instance in SA Mitsouki France 28 July 1993, No. 62865:
“Considérant que la taxe sur la valeur ajoutée dont est redevable un vendeur ou un prestataire de services est, comme les prélèvements de toute nature assis en addition à cette taxe, un élément qui grève le prix convenu avec le client et non un accessoire du prix; qu’en vertu des dispositions précitées, l’assiette de la taxe sur la valeur ajoutée est égale au prix convenu entre les parties, diminué notamment de la taxe exigible sur cette opération; que, par suite lorsqu’un assujetti réalise une affaire moyennant un prix convenu dans des conditions qui ne font pas apparaître que les parties seraient convenues d’ajouter au prix stipulé un supplément de prix égal à la taxe sur la valeur ajoutée applicable a l’opération, la taxe due au titre de cette affaire doit être assise sur une somme égale au prix stipulé diminué notamment du montant de ladite taxe.”

19.             For these reasons the Board allows the appeal, sets aside the order of the Court of Appeal, and restores the order of Peeroo J.  The respondent must pay the costs in the Court of Appeal and before the Board.  If MSI has paid VAT to the Commissioner for Value Added Tax on the basis that the total monthly consideration initially payable by NTA under the lease agreement was Rs523, 165.50 (that is, 110% of the rent stated in the lease) it may (subject to time limits) be able to recover the excess from the Commissioner (compare Wynn Realisations at p527 c-d).  But that is not an issue for the Board, since the Commissioner is not a party to these proceedings, and the Board has heard no argument on the point. 

Wednesday, 3 November 2010

Leedon Limited v (1) Mr Ghanshyam Hurry (2) Mr Roderick John Sutton (3) MPL (I) Limited (in liquidation) (4) DBS Bank Limited (5) JPMP MPL Holdings Limited

[2010] UKPC 27
Privy Council Appeal No. 0084 of 2009


JUDGMENT


Leedon Limited
v 
(1)       Mr Ghanshyam Hurry
(2)       Mr Roderick John Sutton
(3)       MPL (I) Limited (in liquidation)
(4)       DBS Bank Limited
(5)       JPMP MPL Holdings Limited

From the Supreme Court of Mauritius

before 

Lord Rodger
Lord Walker
Lord Brown
Lord Collins
Sir John Dyson SC



JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY

Lord Walker

on 
3 November 2010

Heard on 1 July 2010







Appellant
Michael Brindle QC
(Instructed by Maclay Murray & Spens LLP)

1st-4th Respondents
 Antony Zacaroli QC
Rishi Pursem
(Instructed by Carrington & Associates)

5th Respondent
Sir Hamid Moollan  QC
(Instructed by Streathers Solicitors LLP)

LORD WALKER:
Introduction
1.                 At the end of the hearing on 2 July 2010 the Board announced that the appeal would be dismissed for reasons to be given later.  The Board now gives its reasons.  
2.                 The appeal arose out of an unsuccessful joint venture between two companies incorporated in Mauritius, JPMP MPL Holdings Ltd (“JPMP”) and Leedon Ltd (“Leedon”).  JPMP was owned by Unitas (originally named JP Morgan Partners Asia Pte Ltd), a private equity investor.  Leedon was owned by two brothers resident in Singapore, Mr Anthony Ser and Mr George Ser, who had long experience in the metal stamping industry (and in particular hard disk drives).  
3.                 The corporate vehicle for the joint enterprise was MPL (I) Ltd (“MPL”), which had a wholly-owned subsidiary, Metalform International Limited (“MIL”).  Both these companies were incorporated in Mauritius.  MPL is now in compulsory liquidation.  MIL had three wholly-owned trading subsidiaries, Metalform (Wuxi) Precision Engineering Co Ltd incorporated in the Peoples Republic of China, Metalform Asia Pte Ltd (“MFA”) incorporated in Singapore and Metalform Asia (Thailand) Co Ltd incorporated in Thailand.  These five companies form the Metalform Group. 
4.                 The ownership, control and management of MPL was provided for by its constitution and by a shareholders’ agreement dated 24 June 2004 (“the SHA”) made between JPMP, Leedon, MPL, MIL and MFA.  JPMP held 51% of the issued capital of MPL, designated as B preference shares and ordinary B voting shares.  Leedon had the other 49%, designated as A preference shares and ordinary A voting shares.  JPMP and Leedon subscribed about US$86.1m and about US$82.7m for their respective shareholdings.  The bulk of these funds was lent by MPL to MIL, and passed on by MIL as equity or loan capital to MFA.  MFA used these funds, and further syndicated funds advanced by a consortium of banks under a facilities agreement dated 28 June 2004, to purchase the business assets of a company named Holland Leedon Pte Ltd, owned by the Ser brothers.  The purchase price was about US$267m.  DBS Bank Limited (“DBS”) is the security agent for the syndicated loans, which are secured on all the assets of the Metalform Group.
5.                 The financial position of the Metalform Group deteriorated sharply in 2005.  There was a re-financing operation and an amended facilities agreement executed in or about June 2006. But MFA again defaulted and various notices of default and acceleration were issued between August and November 2006.  Receivers and managers were appointed by DBS on 3 November 2006.  On 18 December 2006 DBS petitioned for MPL to be wound up, and on 22 January 2007 the Bankruptcy Court ordered MPL to be wound up and appointed Mr Ghanshyam Hurry (a partner in Moore Stephens) and Mr Roderick Sutton (a director in Ferrier Hodgson, Hong Kong) as liquidators.
The issues in the litigation
6.                 The issues in dispute in this appeal arise in the liquidation of MPL.  They are concerned with a right of first offer conferred on Leedon by Clause 12 of the SHA.  The first (and, in the event, the only) issue is whether this right was, on the true construction of the SHA, exercisable at all once MPL was in compulsory liquidation.  If Leedon were to succeed on that preliminary point, other interesting and difficult issues would arise, as to whether the right was of a proprietary nature; whether (proprietary or not) it was capable of binding MPL in liquidation; and whether it was overridden by insolvency law as an impermissible fetter on the liquidators’ powers.  
7.                 Mr Brindle QC (for Leedon) candidly accepted, at the beginning of his submissions, that if he failed on the preliminary point of construction, the other issues simply do not arise.  The Board concludes that the appeal does fail on this preliminary point, despite Mr Brindle’s persuasive arguments to the contrary.  It is not therefore necessary or appropriate to express any view on the other issues, on which the Board did not hear any oral submissions.

The SHA
8.                 The SHA is a lengthy and sophisticated commercial agreement, containing 24 clauses and 7 schedules.  Counsel’s arguments have, naturally enough, centred on clause 12, but the clause must be seen in the context of the agreement as a whole.  Recital (D) is in these terms:
“This Agreement sets out the terms on which [JPMP] and Leedon are willing to subscribe for Shares in [MPL] and regulates the respective responsibilities of the Shareholders towards the operation and management of the affairs of the Group, including [the business to be acquired by MFA]”.
Clause 1 contains a large number of definitions and other provisions as to interpretation, including a definition of “Assets Sale”:
“‘Assets Sale’ means a sale by [MPL] or other member of the Group of all, or substantially all, of the Group’s business, assets and undertaking, either by way of a share sale, an assets sale or combination of both.”
Clauses 2 to 5 contain the basic provisions for the subscription for shares in MPL as already described, the constitution of the board of directors, and a requirement for the consent of Leedon to matters set out in Schedule 6 of the SHA (alteration of share capital, winding up, major disposals and acquisitions, and so on).  Clause 6 contains mutual undertakings restricting competition in various ways.  Clauses 7 to 9 contain complex provisions as to the share capital and participation in profits.
9.                 There follows a group of six clauses dealing with the rights of the two sets of shareholders, the term ‘Investor’ being used to refer to JPMP or its permitted transferees and the term ‘Vendor Shareholder’ being used to refer to Leedon or its permitted transferees.  The headings of these clauses give an indication of their scope:
Clause 10: Pre-emption Rights (Issue of New Securities)
Clause 11: Pre-emption Rights (Right of First Offer)
Clause 12: Vendor Shareholder Pre-emption rights (Trade Sale)
Clause 13: Tag-along Rights
Clause 14: Drag-along Right
Clause 15: Exit 
10.             Clause 11 contains various restrictions on share transfers followed (clause 11.5 to 11.8) by a right of first offer exercisable when the holder of shares in a class proposes to make a transfer.  The right is exercisable within 30 days by other holders of shares in that class.  It is important to note that ordinary A and ordinary B shares are defined as being in the same class, and so are A preference and B preference shares.
11.             Clause 12 must be set out in full (except for clause 12.5, which is not concerned with pre-emption rights):
“The Principal Vendor Shareholder shall have a right of first offer (the “Trade Sale Right”) with respect to any proposed Assets Sale.  In the event of a proposed Assets Sale, the Company shall send to the Principal Vendor Shareholder a written notice (the “Trade Sale Notice”) prior to any third party being offered the shares and/or assets for sale.  The Trade Sale Notice shall set forth the assets/shares being offered for sale, the price per share to be received and any other proposed terms and conditions relating to such Proposed Sale.
The delivery of a Trade Sale Notice shall constitute an offer, which shall be irrevocable for 30 days from the date of the Trade Sale Notice (the ‘Trade Sale Notice Period’), by the relevant Group Company to transfer to the Principal Vendor Shareholder the assets/shares subject to the Trade Sale Notice (the ‘Offered Business’) on the terms and conditions set forth therein.  The Principal Vendor Shareholder shall have the right, but not the obligation, to accept such offer to purchase all but not less than all of the Offered Business on the terms and conditions in the Trade Sale Notice by giving a written notice of its acceptance of such offer (an ‘Acceptance Notice’) to the Company prior to the expiration of the Trade Sale Notice Period.  Delivery of an Acceptance Notice by the Principal Vendor shareholder to the Company shall constitute a contract between the Principal Vendor Shareholder and the relevant Group Company for the transfer of the Offered Business on the terms and conditions set forth therein.  The failure of the Principal Vendor Shareholder to give an Acceptance Notice within the Trade Sale Notice Period shall be deemed a rejection of its Trade Sale Right with respect to the subject transfer.
The closing of any sale of assets/shares between the relevant Group Company and the Principal Vendor Shareholder pursuant to this clause 12 shall take place within 15 days from the last day of the Trade Sale Notice Period.
If the Principal Vendor Shareholder does not deliver an Acceptance Notice, the relevant Group Company shall have a period of 180 days from the last day of the Trade Sale Notice Period (the ‘Asset Sale Transfer Period’) during which the relevant Group Company shall have the right to transfer all, but not less than all, of the Offered Business to one or more bona fide third parties for a price equal to at least the price set forth in the Trade Sale Notice and otherwise on terms and conditions not more favourable to the third party than those set forth in the Trade Sale Notice provided that prior to or at completion of such transfer, the relevant Group Company shall deliver to the Principal Vendor Shareholder either (a) a copy of the terms and conditions of sale of the Offered Business agreed with such third party; (b) a letter signed by a Director (other than AS or GS) of the relevant Group Company setting out the principal terms and conditions of sale agreed with such third party; or (c) a letter signed by a Director (other than AS or GS) of the relevant Group Company whereby that Director confirms that the price of the Offered Business sold to such third party is equal to or at least the price set forth in the Trade Sale Notice and that the terms and conditions are not more favourable to the third party than those set forth in the Trade Sale Notice.  If the relevant Group Company does not consummate the transfer of the Offered Business in the Asset Sale Transfer Period; it may not thereafter transfer the Offered Business except in compliance in full with all the provisions of this clause 12.”
12.             Clauses 16 to 24 contained further miscellaneous provisions.  The only one calling for special mention is clause 24, which provided for the agreement to be governed by the law of Singapore, and for any dispute to be settled by arbitration in Singapore.  But in practice these provisions have had no apparent influence on the litigation.  There has been no evidence as to the laws of Singapore.
The course of the appeal
13.             The issue of disposal of the group assets came before the Bankruptcy Judge (the Hon Mr G Angoh) on a motion by the liquidators for an order authorising them to sell MPL’s shares in MIL by private treaty or tender, with consequential directions.  Leedon lodged a lengthy notice of objection, raising seven objections in limine litis and a further six objections on the merits.  One of the objections on the merits was that Leedon had a pre-emptive right over the assets of MPL.  There was a three-day hearing at which the liquidators, Leedon, JPMP and DBS were represented by counsel.  
14.             In his written ruling the Bankruptcy Judge began by considering and disposing of various procedural objections.  He then addressed the right of pre-emption, but referred to clause 11 of the SHA (relating to a transfer of shares in MPL) rather than clause 12 (relating to a sale of group assets).  He also referred to some authorities including British Eagle International Airways Limited v Cie. Nationale Air France [1975] 1 WLR 758 as to the Court disapplying contractual provisions which run counter to the general policy of insolvency legislation.  He then made an order giving the liquidators the authority and direction which they had asked for.
15.             Leedon appealed to the Supreme Court (Yeung Sik Yuen CJ and Matadeen SPJ) which dismissed the appeal on 30 September 2008.  The judgment of the Supreme Court referred to clauses 11 and 12 of the SHA and treated both as “concerned with a consensual share transfer by one shareholder to another.”   Mr Brindle has criticised that as the wrong approach.  The Supreme Court considered that the procedure prescribed by clause 12 would not necessarily fetch the best offer for the liquidators, and did not apply to a liquidator’s sale.  The Supreme Court also relied on the alternative ground that a contractual provision could not limit or circumscribe the liquidators’ powers.  The judgment also dealt with other points which are no longer an issue.
16.             Various events have occurred in the course of the litigation which might, in other circumstances, have called for consideration by the Board.  But in view of the Board’s decision on the issue of construction it would be an unnecessary complication to go into them.
The issue of construction
17.             Mr Brindle was critical of the Supreme Court for having treated clause 12 (as well as clause 11) as concerned with a consensual sale between shareholders in MPL.  The definition of “Assets Sale” is wide but is nevertheless concerned with the sale of assets of the Metalform Group, whether in the form of shares in MIL (or its subsidiaries) or in the form of business assets.  It is not concerned, Mr Brindle emphasised, with the sale of shares in MPL (which are now almost certainly worthless).
18.             That criticism has some force.  But the reference in clause 12.1 to “a proposed Assets Sale” prompts the question: proposed by whom?  The only plausible answer is that the proposal would have come from JPMP, if it had decided that it wished to withdraw from the joint venture and realise its investment (as the provisions for “Exit” in clause 15 show to have been very much in the parties’ minds); and the proposal could be expected to be made at a time when JPMP and Leedon were the only persons interested in the future of the Group.  In economic terms, therefore, the Supreme Court may have not been wholly mistaken in seeing clauses 11 and 12 of the SHA as directed to similar goals.  It is also worth noticing that clause 15 (Exit) refers to an Assets Sale as one form (and perhaps the primary form) of “Exit” contemplated by the SHA.
19.             Mr Zacaroli QC (appearing for the liquidators and DBS) submitted that clause 12 cannot have been intended to have any effect after MPL had gone into liquidation, with the result that MPL ceased to be the beneficial owner of its assets, which instead became subject to a statutory trust (Ayerst v C & K (Construction) Ltd [1976] AC 167, 176-177).  He developed this submission by reference to the detailed and prescriptive requirements of clause 12.  If they applied in a liquidation they would, he submitted, prevent the liquidator from carrying out the sort of rapid marketing exercise that would be essential in achieving a satisfactory realisation of the group assets.  The thirty-day period specified in clause 12.2 would be a serious disadvantage in a situation in which existing customers and potential bidders might be fast losing confidence in the Metalform Group.  The provisions of clause 12.4 would be far too inflexible when the terms of any disposal might have to be the subject of hard bargaining with different bidders (the provisions also refer to letters signed by directors, which would be inappropriate if the relevant company was in liquidation).  There would also be uncertainty, if clause 12 applied during a liquidation, whether (in view of the definition of “Assets Sale”) the liquidators could properly avoid its operation by piecemeal sales of assets.
20.             These are the main points that Mr Zacaroli relied on in urging the Board to conclude that the application of clause 12 in a liquidation would be not merely inconvenient or burdensome (points that would go to a later issue in the appeal) but that it was so unthinkable as to be excluded as a matter of construction.  The clause was directed to the joint venture while it was proceeding (as Recital (D) indicated).  It was simply not directed to the possibility of a liquidation.  Against that Mr Brindle, in a spirited reply, argued that there was no reason why the operation of clause 12 should be limited to what he referred to as a “solvent world”.  The points made against him went to inconvenience or difficulty, not to impossibility.  It was not common ground, he added, that clause 12 (which also appears in articles 28-32 of MPL’s constitution) was incapable of binding DBS, which had in any case stood back from the liquidation.
21.             The point is in the end a short point of construction.  The Board accepts the cumulative force of the principal points made by Mr Zacaroli.  Clause 12 was simply not intended to apply in a liquidation.  The appeal is therefore dismissed with costs.   


  

Wednesday, 21 July 2010

Marie Jean Nelson Mirbel and Others v The State of Mauritius & Others

[2010] UKPC 16
Privy Council Appeal No 0046 of 2009
JUDGMENT
Marie Jean Nelson Mirbel and Others v The State of Mauritius & Others
From the Supreme Court of Mauritius
before
Lord Phillips
Lord Rodger
Lord Walker
Lord Brown
Lord Clarke

JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY
Lord Phillips
on
21 July 2010
Heard on 27 April 2010
Appellant
Anil Gayan SC
Vijaya Sumpath
(Instructed by Lex Advoc
Chambers)
Respondent
Phillip Baker QC
Rajesh Ramloll
Imran Afzal
(Instructed by Royds LLP)

Judgment delivered by LORD PHILLIPS
Introduction
1. Section 18 of the Finance Act 2006 introduced into Mauritius a new tax called the national residential property tax (“NRPT”). The tax was introduced with effect from the year of income 2006 to 2007, so that the new tax would first be payable in the year of assessment 2007 to 2008. The appellants are four citizens in Mauritius, who own land on the Island. On 1 September 2006 the appellants issued a Plaint with Summons (“the Plaint”) before the Supreme Court. Although this did not expressly invoke the section, it is common ground that by so doing they were seeking constitutional redress under section 17(1) of the Constitution. The defendants, who are respondents to this appeal, were the State of Mauritius, the Ministry of Finance and Economic Development and the Mauritius Revenue Authority. The appellants alleged that the introduction of the NRPT infringed sections 3 and 8 of the Constitution. Before the NRPT took effect, its provisions were significantly amended by section 17 of the Finance Act 2007. This did not cause the appellants to make any amendment to the Plaint.
2. On 13 September 2007 the respondents filed a plea in limine litis. This sought the dismissal of the Plaint on three grounds:
a) The appellants had no locus standi.
b) The Plaint disclosed no cause of action.
c) The Plaint was in breach of the Constitutional Relief Rules.
The respondents’ plea in limine succeeded on the first ground. The Supreme Court, K P Matadeen, Acting Chief Justice, and A F Chui Yew Cheong, Judge, held that the appellants had no locus standi and dismissed their Plaint with costs on this ground. The Court did not deal with the other two grounds.
3. Thus the sole issue raised by this appeal, which is brought by permission of the Board, is whether the appellants have, by their Plaint, alleged facts which give them locus standi to bring their claim. It is rightly common ground that this issue falls to be resolved on the assumption that the averments of fact made in the Plaint are accurate.
The Constitution
4. The following provisions of the Constitution are of particular relevance:
“3 Fundamental rights and freedoms of the individual It is hereby recognised and declared that in Mauritius there have existed and shall continue to exist without discrimination by reason of race, place of origin, political opinions, colour, creed or sex, but subject to respect for the rights and freedoms of others and for the public interest, each and all of the following human rights and fundamental freedoms -
. . .
(c) the right of the individual to protection for the privacy of his home and other property and from deprivation of property without compensation,
. . .
8 Protection from deprivation of property (1) No property of any description shall be compulsorily taken possession of, and no interest in or right over property of any description shall be compulsorily acquired, except where -
. . .
(4) Nothing contained in or done under the authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in contravention of subsection (1) -
(a) to the extent that the law in question makes provision for the taking of possession or acquisition of property -
(i) in satisfaction or any tax, rate or due;
. . .
17 Enforcement of protective provisions
(1) Where any person alleges that any of sections 3 to 16 has been, is being or is likely to be contravened in relation to him, then, without prejudice to any other action with respect to the same matter that is lawfully available, that person may apply to the Supreme Court for redress.
(2) The Supreme Court shall have original jurisdiction to hear and determine any application made by any person in pursuance of subsection (1), and may make such orders, issue such writs and give such directions as it may consider appropriate for the purpose of enforcing, or securing the enforcement of, any of sections 3 to 16 to the protection of which the person concerned is entitled. Provided that the Supreme Court shall not exercise its powers under this subsection if it is satisfied that adequate means of redress for the contravention alleged are or have been available to the person concerned under any other law.”
The NRPT in its original form.
5. In its original form the tax was imposed on all owners of real property in a residential area, whether or not there was residential accommodation on the land. The tax was imposed at a flat rate of 10 rupees per square metre of land in a residential area, and 30 rupees per square metre on flats or similar high rise buildings or where a building had been added above another under “droit de surélévation”. The tax was imposed at the same rate regardless of the location of the land and whether or not the land had development potential. There was an exemption from liability to pay the tax for those whose annual income did not exceed 215,000 rupees. There was also a right to deduct from the tax payable any sums paid by the landowner in the form of municipal rates.
The Plaint
6. Paragraph 1 of the Plaint alleged that the appellants were Mauritian citizens and set out particulars of the land that each was alleged to own. Paragraph 2 alleged, inter alia, that the appellants were taxpayers. Paragraph 3 alleged that the provisions of sections 3 and 8 of the Constitution of Mauritius “have been, are being and are likely to be contravened in relation to them” (emphasis added) by the enactment of the provisions of the Finance Act 2006 relating to the levying of NRPT.
Paragraph 10 alleged:
“Plaintiffs aver that they fall within the net and conditions provided for by the National Residential Property Tax (NRPT).”
7. Paragraph 11 alleged:
“Plaintiffs aver that they never have had to pay any such tax which affects and will continue to affect their rights as a property owner inasmuch as the tax is levied on them in their capacity as owners of land without the Defendants making available any corresponding benefits to them in the enjoyment of their property rights.”
8. The pleading set out the provisions of the 2006 Act that established liability to pay NRPT and then went on to allege that these violated the Constitution for the following reasons:
“23. Plaintiffs aver that there is no factual, legal, constitutional or any imperative reason for the introduction of the new NRPT and they maintain that the NRPT is not a valid and proper taxing statute inasmuch as it amounts to a colourable device to get around their fundamental right to own property, a right which is sacrosanct and guaranteed by the Constitution of Mauritius.
24. Plaintiffs further aver that the purported NRPT is not a tax proper inasmuch as it results to a forced loan without compensation.
25. Plaintiffs also aver that the NRPT further violates their constitutional rights in another respect and must be struck down as being harsh, cruel and punitive particularly as regards the heavy penalties provided in cases of non-compliance.
26. Plaintiffs aver, in the further alternative, that the NRPT which is assimilated in the Act to an Income Tax is unreasonable inasmuch as Income Tax is of a recurrent nature whereas mere ownership of immoveable residential property cannot amount to an income liable to be taxed as Income Tax.
27. Plaintiffs aver that, by proceeding in respect of the NRPT as Defendants Nos. 1 and 2 have done and as Defendant No.3 is gearing up to administer, they are in effect depriving the Plaintiffs of their properties, which are fixed assets not generating any income.
28. Plaintiffs further aver that the NRPT which is being applied indiscriminately to all residential property without taking into account inter-alia the location, market value, quality of residential land, neighbourhood, availability of services and amenities etc cannot continue to stay on the [Statute] Book as it is unfair, arbitrary, unreasonable and oppressive.
29. Plaintiffs aver that it is the duty of Defendants Nos. 1 and 2 to ensure that any taxing statute is fair, efficient, proportionate and complies with the requirements of the basic principles of taxation.
30. Plaintiffs aver that a comparison in the application of the NRPT will, as an indication, demonstrate its unfairness, unreasonableness and the inequity. ... ”
Examples were given of the manner in which the NRPT was alleged to operate unfairly and the pleading continued:
“32. Plaintiffs aver that, in the circumstances, the NRPT has unreasonably assumed that every person who is the owner of residential property and who is above the threshold of Rupees 215,000 per annum, is able to pay and such assumption defies reality and logic.
33. Plaintiffs aver that the NRPT has distortions and anomalies in its application which render it unequal and defeat the right in the Constitution to equality of treatment of all tax-payers.
34. Plaintiffs aver that any tax must satisfy the exigencies of equality, neutrality and fairness and they aver that the Defendants have failed to ensure that the NRPT meets these exigencies with the result that the NRPT is not a tax proper.
35. Plaintiffs aver that, while it is in order for the Defendants to impose taxes which are assessed on income-generating activities or on consumption in accordance with recognised and objective criteria, it is not open or lawful for the Defendants to act in violation of the fundamental rights of the Constitution or to impose and receive such a tax.
36. Plaintiffs aver additionally that the net result of the NRPT is to convert residential property ‘en toute propriete’ into State land and this is something which is an infringement of the Constitution.
37. Plaintiffs aver that the NRPT has the consequence of destroying the existing legal regime of ownership of property and it attempts to do so by circumventing the Provisions of the Constitution.
38. Plaintiffs aver that the imposition of the NRPT is a colourable device designed to get around fundamental Constitutional provisions as stated above and to deny them the protection of the law.
39. Plaintiffs aver that they are seeking redress from this Honourable Court for the purposes of protecting their legal and Constitutional rights as well as seeking orders or pronouncements that the Defendants are debarred from acting in a manner which is destructive of their acquired rights.”
9. The relief claimed included a Declaration that the provisions of the Finance Act 2006 that related to the NRPT were null and void and of no legal effect by virtue of section 2 of the Constitution.
10. Minor amendments were subsequently made to the Plaint which are of no relevance to this appeal.
11. On 26 January 2007 the respondents served a demand for particulars of the Plaint. The appellants’ response of 14 February 2007 dealt with many of these by the statement “this is a matter of evidence which will be adduced in Court”. The Board would make the following comments in relation to this form of response. First the requests to which it was given were not requests for evidence, but for particulars of the appellants’ case. Secondly, and more significantly, the appellants’ response exemplified an approach to pleadings which the Board deprecates. Pleadings are designed to identify the issues to be resolved by the Court, they should not be treated as a tactical game. At the same time it is fair to say that the demand for particulars suggests something of a scatter gun approach to the exercise of seeking particulars. Particulars should only be sought where they are really needed to elucidate the other party’s case, not as a matter of course.
12. The particulars sought included particulars of the plaintiffs’ tax account numbers. This was, perhaps, intended to assist the third respondent to check on the appellants’ tax status. The appellants unhelpfully responded by averring “this is privileged information”. When further and better particulars of this were sought on 29 June 2007 (not placed before the Board) the response provided on 12 July 2007 was: “This is a privileged document. Defendant is free to summons the MRA”. As the Mauritius Revenue Authority was a party to the litigation this response was bizarre. It may be that the Authority was having some difficulty in checking the appellants’ assertion that they were taxpayers, in which event it would have been helpful to provide the assistance sought.
Amendments to the NRPT
13. The Finance Act 2007 was passed by the National Assembly on 7 August and received the assent of the President on 21 August 2007. It made the following significant amendments to the NRPT:
i) The income threshold for liability to pay the tax was raised to 385,000 rupees.
ii) A cap of 5% of the total income of the taxpayer was placed on the NRPT payable.
iii) Residential land on which there was no residential building was excluded.
14. These amendments to the NRPT removed features of the tax which might have been thought to be harsh or inequitable. They also raised questions in relation to the appellants’ Plaint. If this was treated simply as an attack on the NRPT in its original form, the issues raised by the Plaint were of historical interest only and there was no good reason why the proceedings should be taken further. If, however, it was the appellants’ case that the amendments made to the NRPT did not affect the substance of their claim, amendments to the Plaint were desirable. Some of the averments made in the Plaint, such as that which alleged that the tax threshold was an income of 215,000 rupees and that which alleged that the tax applied to bare land, were no longer accurate. An amendment to bring these averments into accord with the tax as amended would have clarified the appellants’ case. Most of the pleading was, however, as capable of application to the tax in its new form as it had been to the tax in its original form.
15. The appellants had, in fact, made it plain before the Finance Act 2007 was enacted that the changes that were to be made to the NRPT would not affect the relief that they were claiming. In their response of 12 July 2007 to the further and better particulars sought on 29 June the appellants stated:
“The Plaintiffs are challenging the very basis and concept of the NRPT in as much as it is being imposed without any Judicial or reasonable foundation. The very fact that the Minister has altered the original basis in itself indicate of (sic) the lack of ‘reason and basis’ for such a tax which will, in the words of the Minister in his Budget 2007/2008, undergo further transitional arrangements. These arrangements are transitional until the valuation roll is ready.”
The plea in limine litis
16. The plea in limine litis was combined with a plea on the merits. The plea on the merits addressed the Plaint on the premise that it fell to be considered in the light of the amendments that had been made to the NRPT by the 2007 Act. Thus, where appropriate, the respondents pleaded the amendments that had been made to the tax in answer to the provisions of the original tax that the appellants had cited in their pleading.
17. The relevant part of the plea in limine litis simply alleged that the plaintiffs had no locus standi to enter the Plaint. The plea on the merits went on, however, to challenge the averments in the Plaint that underpinned the plaintiffs’ locus standi: “3. Defendants deny paragraph 3 of the amended plaint with summons and aver that plaintiffs have failed to disclose their annual income and to show that they are liable to pay the National Residential Property Tax.”
“8. Defendants deny paragraph 10 of the said affidavit (sic) in its form and tenor and reiterate the averments made at paragraph 3 above.”
18. The Board has been surprised that the respondents should have chosen to make this particular challenge to the appellants’ locus standi. Before the Board it has been common ground that the appellants had, at the least, to prove that they were liable to pay the NRPT if they were to be entitled to relief under section 17(1) of the Constitution. Liability to pay the tax fell on those who had an annual income of 215,000 rupees, raised by amendment to 385,000 rupees, but there was no reason to believe that the appellants did not enjoy this relatively modest income. They had pleaded that they were taxpayers. Liability also depended, by reason of the amendment of the tax, upon ownership of land carrying a residential building. The appellants had pleaded that they were owners of portions of land, giving particulars of those portions by reference to entries in the land register. In the case of at least three of the appellants the location of the land appears to tally with the address of the appellant in the pleadings. It is hard to believe that the respondents would have had any difficulty in checking whether the appellants owned residential buildings on their land. Had there been any doubt about this the matter could have been informally resolved between the parties. It would, after all, have been very odd if the appellants had chosen to attack a tax that did not apply to them. On the face of it a citizen is likely to be content that others should be liable to pay a tax from which the citizen is himself exempt. Thus the challenge to the appellants’ locus standi on the ground that the Plaint did not adequately claim that the appellants were liable to pay NRPT appears to have been no more than a pleading point. It may be, however, that there was more to the respondents’ challenge than readily meets the eye.
19. The plea in limine litis was heard by the Supreme Court on 4 June 2008. Mr Bhaukaurally, the Assistant Solicitor General, appeared for the respondents and Mr Gayan SC appeared for the appellants, as he did before the Board. The transcript suggests that, on the issue of locus standi, it was common ground, as it was before the Board, that the appellants had to establish that they were liable to pay the NRPT if they were to have locus standi to bring proceedings under section 17 of the Constitution. Mr Bhaukaurally submitted that the appellants’ Plaint did not adequately plead that they were so liable in that there was no averment in the pleading that the plots of land that the appellants claimed they owned were “constitutive of the tax base ... in respect of which they would be liable to tax”.
20. In making submissions in support of the part of the plea in limine litis that alleged that the appellants’ pleading did not disclose a cause of action, which Mr Bhaukaurally rightly observed was closely linked with the attack on locus standi, he submitted that there was no averment that the appellants fell within the tax threshold needed to give them standing for relief. He submitted that the Plaint as a whole tended to show that the appellants were trying to establish a case of public interest litigation, which was not acceptable in Mauritius.
21. That suggestion appeared to receive some support when Mr Gayan SC began his submissions for the appellants. He invoked the relaxed approach to locus standi that now prevails in judicial review proceedings in the United Kingdom and a similar approach that he submitted prevailed in relation to constitutional issues in India. He submitted that it would be a pity if a pressure group, or even a public spirited taxpayer, were prevented by “outdated technical rules” of locus standi from bringing the matter to the attention of the Court to vindicate the rule of law and to get the unlawful conduct stopped.
22. Mr Gayan went on, however, to submit that the appellants’ case was that they did have locus standi. Their claim was that they were going to be affected by the imposition of the NRPT and wished to test its constitutionality. Later, when dealing with the submission that the Plaint disclosed no cause of action, he submitted that the amendments to the tax did not destroy the basis upon which the case was being advanced.
23. The Court, in giving judgment, found for the respondents on the issue of locus standi. It drew attention to the fact that the pleading had not been amended to reflect the changes made by the Finance Act 2007 to the NRPT. Referring to paragraph 10 of the pleading, the Court commented that this could only mean, when interpreted in the light of the other averments, that each of the appellants had a total income that exceeded 215,000 rupees. The appellants had averred that they were owners of land, but they had not averred that they were owners of “residential property” as expressly defined in the Act, nor that each was in receipt of an annual income exceeding 385,000 rupees. The appellants had failed to show that they had a personal interest in the proceedings and the Constitution did not allow them to bring an action in the Court to litigate a matter of general public interest.
A misunderstanding resolved
24. When this appeal came before the Board it became apparent that there was a misunderstanding on the part of the respondents as to the position of the appellants. By this time payment of the NRPT had, in accordance with its provisions, become due by those liable to pay it. None of the appellants had paid the tax. The respondents appear to have assumed that this was because the appellants considered that they did not fall within the provisions of the tax but Mr Gayan indicated that this was not the position. At the request of counsel the Board granted a short adjournment so that counsel could resolve the matter. On the Board’s return, Mr Baker QC for the respondents said that Mr Gayan had explained that his clients accepted that, if the tax was lawful, they were liable to pay it, together with such penalty as might be due for non-payment. The reason why they had not paid the tax was that they contended that it was unlawful. In the light of this assurance Mr Baker, while submitting that the Supreme Court had correctly decided the issue of locus standi on the ground given by the Court, devoted most of his energies to seeking to support the decision on a different basis.
25. Mr Gayan for his part, while arguing that his clients’ locus standi was adequately averred on the pleadings, once again attacked reliance on locus standi on the ground that it hindered access to justice and was at odds with the more generous approach now adopted in judicial review proceedings in the United Kingdom. Locus standi under section 17(1) of the Constitution 26. Section 17(1) of the Constitution is designed to afford an additional or alternative remedy for someone who contends that one or more of the fundamental rights that he enjoys under Chapter II of the Constitution have been, or are likely to be, infringed. The section provides a personal remedy for personal prejudice. It is not an appropriate vehicle for a general challenge to a legislative provision or an administrative act, brought in the public interest. This is made clear by the phrase “in relation to him” in section 17(1). It has also been repeatedly emphasised by the Supreme Court. In this case the Supreme Court rightly cited Tengur v Ministry of Education and Scientific Research and Another [2002] SCJ 48, [2002] MR 166 as exemplifying, in a tax context, the distinction between a claim under section 17(1) and a claim for judicial review. Mr Gayan’s attempt to rely on principles of locus standi in relation to judicial review was misconceived. The reasoning of the Supreme Court 27. The reasoning of the Supreme Court in this case is as follows. The Plaint had addressed the NRPT in its original form. Paragraph 10, in averring that the appellants fell “within the net and conditions provided for” by the NRPT alleged that the conditions for liability to pay the tax, as laid down by the NRPT in its original form, applied to the plaintiffs. Those conditions had been amended, but the pleading had not. Ex hypothesi paragraph 10 did not aver that the conditions of liability to pay the tax laid down by the NRPT in its amended form were satisfied.
28. The Board appreciates the force of this reasoning, but has on reflection concluded that it is not sound. The Plaint has been treated by the parties as addressing the NRPT in its amended form. Paragraph 10 of the pleading avers that the appellants fall “within the net and conditions” provided for by that tax. While it is arguable that this should be read having regard to the conditions of the tax specified in the pleading, the Board considers that the better approach is to treat paragraph 10 as applying to the conditions provided for by the NRPT as they now are. Thus paragraph 10 should be read as asserting that the land that the appellants own carries residential buildings and that their annual incomes exceed 385,000 rupees. This approach accords with the approach to the appellants’ claim that the parties have adopted. It also avoids striking out the proceedings on a pleading point where there is, in reality, no lack of clarity as to the real issues that divide the parties. For this reason, the Board is not able to uphold the decision of the Supreme Court on the basis of the reason given by the Court.
The alternative argument on locus standi.
29. Mr Baker’s alternative argument appears from this extract from his written case:
“…in principle it may be possible for a taxpayer to show that a particular tax has imposed an excessive burden on him such as to impair his economic viability and to amount to expropriation of property rather than genuine taxation. However, to do so the taxpayer would need to bring details of: his financial situation, the burden of the tax, and its impact on him. Such information might be contained in averments in the original plaint, but such information would be necessary to show in what way the constitutional rights were contravened ‘in relation to him’”.
It was Mr Baker’s case that the appellants, as taxpayers, could not contend that they were personally prejudiced by reason of being required to pay an unlawful tax unless they could demonstrate that the features that made the tax unlawful impacted adversely on them as opposed to others who have to pay this tax.
30. The Board has concluded that this argument is unsound. If a plaintiff attacks one provision of a tax statute on the ground that that provision discriminates unfairly against some of those who have to pay the tax, then it is arguable that the plaintiff must show that he is one of those unfairly prejudiced by the provision in question in order to establish locus standi to bring a claim under section 17(1) of the Constitution. That is not, however, this case. The appellants are making a frontal attack on the whole of the NRPT on a variety of grounds, alleging that it is contrary to the Constitution and consequently null and void. It should not be inferred that the Board has concluded that there is any merit in this attack. That is not a matter with which the Board has been concerned. There is, however, no doubt that if the attack is sound, the appellants are personally prejudiced by being required to pay a tax that is, ex hypothesi, unlawful, even if they are in the same boat as all the others who are being required to pay this tax.
Disposal
31. For these reasons the Board has concluded that the attack on the appellants’ locus standi has not been made out and that this appeal must be allowed. The Board imposes, however, the following conditions that are designed to ensure that the pleadings clearly and unequivocally identify the issues: The appellants shall, within 28 days:
i) amend the Plaint with Summons to plead the provisions of the NRPT in its current form;
ii) provide particulars of the incomes that they contend render them liable to pay NRPT;
iii) provide particulars of the residential buildings, ownership of which they contend renders them liable to pay NRPT.
Subject to compliance with these conditions, this appeal is allowed.
Costs
32. For the reasons that the Board has given, this interlocutory skirmish has not reflected well on either of the parties. The Board has reached the provisional conclusion that a special order for costs is appropriate. Unless either party makes written submissions to the contrary within 28 days, the Board awards the appellants their costs in the cause. This means that if these proceedings are ultimately successful the appellants will get their costs in relation to the plea in limine litis, here and below, but there will be no order for these costs if the appellants’ claim does not ultimately succeed.