| A briefing by David Anderson
Solicitor and Chartered Tax Adviser, Sykes Anderson LLP solicitors -
9 December 2004
A recent opinion given by the Advocate-General
in Inspecteur van de Belastingdienst v. te Heerlen [C-376/03] - is likely
to have important tax implications for cross border investors. The opinion
was given on 26 October 2004 and is likely to be followed by the European
Court of Justice.
The Facts
D lived in Germany and was a German national. On 1 January 1998 10%
of his total assets were buildings in the Netherlands. All his other
assets were in Germany. The Dutch Inland Revenue assessed him to Dutch
wealth tax on his Dutch assets. Under Dutch internal law Dutch residents
could deduct Florins 241.000 before applying the relevant percentage
for Dutch wealth tax. This deduction was not available to non-Dutch
residents. It was exceptionally available to Belgian residents because
of a specific clause in the Netherlands - Belgian double tax treaty.
However you would have to be Belgian tax resident to benefit from this
treaty. D refused to pay the full amount of the tax and claimed the
same deductions as a Dutch tax resident. The Dutch Inland Revenue refused
this and the question for the European Court was whether this decision
conformed to European law. The answer is likely to be no and the tax
payer is likely to win. This has wide implications across Europe especially
for countries like France and Spain, which have annual wealth taxes.
The Law
Article 56 CE prohibits any restrictions on movements of capital between
EU member states. This is without prejudice to national tax legislation,
which can establish distinctions based on residence or situation of
capital. The main legal question was whether Article 56 CE overruled
the internal Dutch tax law. A very interesting subsidiary question was
raised as to whether a German tax resident could make use of the Netherlands-Belgian
treaty because depriving a German resident of access to this treaty
would operate as discrimination against the German resident. This is
groundbreaking and could be the start of a European wide tax system
by the backdoor.
Decision
The Advocate General came to the view that Article 56 CE overruled the
Dutch internal law. He indicated that the German resident should be
able to rely on the Belgian treaty. He recommended that the Court should
not decide the case on the basis of the Belgian treaty as this would
have major implications as tax payers would then analyse tax treaties
to see which ones offered most advantages to them and then seek to rely
on that treaty. Thus an Irish tax resident who owned a French investment
property could say that he wanted to claim tax exemptions under the
UK tax treaty with France.
General Comments
The following points were made:
- The opinion is limited to individuals' personal tax not corporate
tax.
- The existing case law in this area, which relates to income tax discrimination,
can apply to capital taxes such as wealth tax.
- The fact that an EU country gives its tax residents tax advantages
it does not give to non residents is not in itself illegal. It must
not however hinder free circulation of capital and the right to freely
establish in another member state.
- Wealth tax currently only applies in Spain, Finland, France, Luxembourg,
Netherlands and Sweden. This means if you are tax resident in a country
(like the UK) which does not have wealth tax there is no set off of
the tax in the country the tax payer is resident and so the assets in
the other state are wholly taxed in that country.
Implications for French Wealth Tax
- France currently allows French tax residents to deduct 20% of the
value of their main residence before calculating wealth tax. This is
not available to non residents. It is difficult to see how this position
can be maintained after this case.
- There are exemptions from wealth tax in French national law for business
assets. These exemptions require a French tax resident to be (broadly)
working in the business. The exemption should now apply to a UK tax
resident person who is managing the business from the UK.
- Comparing Article 32(3) of the new UK-France Double Tax treaty (which
is still to be ratified) with say Article 23(2) of the France-Spain
Tax Treaty of 12 th June 1997 is instructive. The French treaty with
Spain exempts Spanish tax payers from French Wealth tax if the Spanish
Tax payer owns less than 25% of the shares in a French resident company.
The UK resident tax payer will get no such relief and will have to pay
French wealth tax on the shares in the French company. This opinion
suggests that a UK shareholder could demand to be treated in the same
way as a Spanish tax payer and be exempted from Wealth Tax on his say
24% shareholding in a French company.
There are similar tax exemptions in Article 23(4)
of the Spain-France Treaty for Spanish residents involved in international
transportation who are exempt from French wealth Tax on assets in France.
Article 23(5) contains a useful clause, which provides
that any other assets not within Article 23 of the Treaty are exempted
from French Wealth tax. This means that if an asset is not within the
definitions in the treaty and is in France it is not assessable to French
Wealth Tax. This offers a useful way of creative planning to avoid French
Wealth Tax based on ensuring assets are packaged in a way which falls
outside the definitions. If Spanish tax residents are able to get away
without paying French Wealth Tax on French assets then UK tax residents
will, if this opinion is followed in full, be able to claim the same
exemptions.
- The UK-France double tax treaty has some important
tax breaks, which are not available in other treaties including the
France-Ireland double tax treaty. If the Court accepts the secondary
argument this will open up the French market to Irish (and other) investors
and remove the tax discrimination they currently face.
This article is provided by courtesy of Sykes
Anderson LLP who is able to assist with purchasing through sale and
leaseback schemes. Further information is available from Saul Brownstein
- sbrownstein@sykesanderson.com- and the website www.sykesanderson.com
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