R (Daily Mail and General Trust plc) v HM Treasury explained

Court:ECJ
Submitdate:19 March
Submityear:1987
Decidedate:27 September
Decideyear:1988
Fullname:The Queen v H. M. Treasury and Commissioners of Inland Revenue, ex parte Daily Mail and General Trust plc.
Celexid:61987CJ0081
Casetype:Reference for a preliminary ruling
Casenumber:81/87
Ecli:ECLI:EU:C:1988:456
Chamber:Full chamber
Nationality:United Kingdom
Procedural:High Court of Justice, Queen' s Bench Division
Judgerapporteur:O. Due
Judgepresident:Lord Mackenzie Stuart
Advocategeneral:M. Darmon
Legislationaffecting:Interprets articles 52 and 58 of the EEC
Keywords:Freedom of establishment

R (Daily Mail and General Trust plc) v HM Treasury and Commissioners of Inland Revenue (1988) is an EU law case, concerning the freedom of establishment in the European Union.

Facts

Daily Mail and General Trust plc, owners of the newspaper the Daily Mail, was resident in the United Kingdom. It wanted to transfer residence to the Netherlands and set up a subsidiary or branch in the UK instead. This was to be done for the purpose of selling a significant part of its non-permanent assets and using the sale proceeds to buy its own shares without having to pay the tax normally due on such transactions in the UK. It could not do this without permission from the UK Treasury. It argued this contravened its right of establishment under (what is now) the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union article 49.

Judgment

The Court of Justice held that TFEU article 49 did not apply, and so the rules requiring UK Treasury permission could operate. Given the wide variation in national laws about the required factor connecting a company to the national territory for the purposes of incorporation, and also the wide variation of national laws on transfer of a company’s head office from one place to another, companies cannot rely on articles 49 and 54.

See also