Earlier this year, the First-tier Tribunal handed down decisions in two cases concerning the meaning of ordinary share capital, McQuillan v HMRC and Castledine v HMRC. In both cases, the court had to decide whether shares with no rights other than to redemption at par were ordinary share capital. The availability of entrepreneurs’ relief depended on this point. In McQuillan, the court held that the shares were not ordinary share capital; in Castledine, it held that they were. The question is: how did the tribunals end up reaching diametrically opposed conclusions on the same legal question? The answer may lie in the different approach adopted by each tribunal to the process of purposive construction; and the particular purposive constructions sought by the taxpayers regarding the meaning of ordinary share capital.
Earlier this year, the First-tier Tribunal handed down decisions in two cases concerning the meaning of ordinary share capital, McQuillan v HMRC and Castledine v HMRC. In both cases, the court had to decide whether shares with no rights other than to redemption at par were ordinary share capital. The availability of entrepreneurs’ relief depended on this point. In McQuillan, the court held that the shares were not ordinary share capital; in Castledine, it held that they were. The question is: how did the tribunals end up reaching diametrically opposed conclusions on the same legal question? The answer may lie in the different approach adopted by each tribunal to the process of purposive construction; and the particular purposive constructions sought by the taxpayers regarding the meaning of ordinary share capital.