Sign up to our free newsletter
Follow Us
LoginSubscribe Now
Solicitors Journal LogoInforming the legal profession since 1856
Solicitors Journal Logo
  • Legal News
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Practice Notes
  • Business
  • International
  • Court Reports
  • AI Search
  • Digital Edition
  • Subscription Options
  • Advertise with Us
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • FAQ
    • Guide to Authors
Solicitors Journal

Informing the legal profession since 1856.

Follow us

Topics

  • Legal News
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Practice Notes
  • Business
  • International
  • Court Reports

About

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • FAQ
  • Guide to Authors

Subscribe

  • Subscription Options
  • Digital Edition
  • Free Newsletter

Editorial

editorial@solicitorsjournal.com+44 (0)1223 750 755

Subscriptions

subscriptions@solicitorsjournal.com+44 (0)1223 750 755

Advertising

Advertise with usadvertising@solicitorsjournal.com+44 (0)1223 750 755

© 2026 Solicitors Journal in partnership with the International In-house Counsel Journal | ISSN 0038-1047 | Images: Freepix, Unsplash and by permission of the authors

Terms and ConditionsCookie PolicyPrivacy PolicyPLS Clear logoCopyright & permissions

Unicomer (St Vincent) Ltd v Appeal Commissioners: Privy Council remits insurance tax assessments but upholds hire purchase ruling

11 Jun 2026Court Report
Share:
Unicomer (St Vincent) Ltd v Appeal Commissioners: Privy Council remits insurance tax assessments but upholds hire purchase ruling

Caribbean retailer's tax appeal partially succeeds as Board orders reassessment of credit protection insurance deductions.

The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council has delivered a split decision in a significant Caribbean tax appeal, remitting two of three contested assessments for reconsideration whilst dismissing the third ground of appeal outright.

In Unicomer (St Vincent) Ltd v Appeal Commissioners and another [2026] UKPC 24, the Board considered whether the Revenue of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines had lawfully assessed the appellant, a "Courts"-branded furniture and appliance retailer, to additional corporation tax and withholding tax in respect of credit protection insurance ("CPI") premiums, and to income tax on the full sale value of hire purchase transactions at the point of contract rather than upon receipt of instalments.

The insurance premium assessments

The appellant had offered CPI to hire purchase customers through Massy United Insurance Limited ("United"), a Barbados-based insurer. United reinsured the risk with Canterbury Insurance Company Limited, a Bermuda-incorporated entity within the same Unicomer group, which ultimately received over 95% of the net premiums. When calculating its corporate income tax for 2007 to 2011, the appellant sought to deduct the CPI premiums of EC$4,450,000 as a legitimate business overhead. The Revenue disallowed the deduction under section 23 of the Income Tax Act, treating United as a mere conduit, and simultaneously levied withholding tax of EC$890,000 on the same sum under section 66.

The Revenue conceded before the Board that, given the High Court's unchallenged finding that United was not a sham or conduit, the assessments as framed were inconsistent with those findings and potentially excessive. Lady Simler, delivering the judgement of the Board, accepted that the Revenue was right to make that concession.

The appellant pressed for the assessments to be quashed entirely. The Board declined. Despite the rejection of the conduit case, it identified features of the evidence capable of engaging section 23 independently. Most significantly, the appellant's audited financial statements, prepared by KPMG, consistently recorded CPI premium payments as flowing directly to Canterbury rather than to United for a period spanning at least seven years. The appellant attributed this to an accounting error, but the High Court judge had found that explanation "wholly incredulous", a conclusion the Board found was plainly open to her. The appellant's own finance director had also admitted to the Revenue that United acted as Canterbury's local agent.

The Board further noted that United paid out only 12.2% of net premiums in claims, with the remaining 87.8% flowing to the related reinsurer, raising questions as to whether the arrangement was commercially normal absent the intra-group connection. These factors, taken together, were sufficient to keep open the possibility of a valid assessment under section 23. The matter was remitted to the Appeal Commissioners, rather than the High Court, on the basis that the Commissioners are the specialist body with appropriate statutory powers under sections 104 and 105 of the Income Tax Act.

The deferred hire purchase payments

The third issue concerned whether income from hire purchase sales accrued for tax purposes at the point the agreement was signed or only as instalments were received. The Revenue had assessed the appellant on the former basis, relying on section 9(1)(b) of the Income Tax Act, which provides that where a commercially recognised accounting system other than the cash basis is regularly followed, income accrues when credited in the taxpayer's books.

The appellant argued that prevailing commercial accounting standards, including the distinction between finance and operating leases under IFRS 16, should govern the analysis and required the Revenue to adduce expert evidence to establish its case.

The Board rejected both arguments. Section 9(1)(b) does not mandate the use of external accounting standards to determine the timing of accrual; it simply identifies the point at which income enters the books as the taxable moment. The appellant's own evidence, including affidavit evidence from its Regional Tax Manager and KPMG partner, confirmed that the full hire purchase price was credited to the books at inception. No distinction was drawn between the books of account and the audited financial statements. The Revenue was therefore plainly entitled to apply section 9(1)(b) without expert evidence.

The appeal on this issue was dismissed. The Board advised His Majesty that the appeal on issues one and two should be allowed only to the extent of remitting those assessments to the Appeal Commissioners, with the third issue dismissed outright.

Latest Articles

The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council has delivered a split decision in a significant Caribbean tax appeal, remitting two of three contested assessments for reconsideration whilst dismissing the third ground of appeal outright.

In Unicomer (St Vincent) Ltd v Appeal Commissioners and another [2026] UKPC 24, the Board considered whether the Revenue of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines had lawfully assessed the appellant, a "Courts"-branded furniture and appliance retailer, to additional corporation tax and withholding tax in respect of credit protection insurance ("CPI") premiums, and to income tax on the full sale value of hire purchase transactions at the point of contract rather than upon receipt of instalments.

The insurance premium assessments

The appellant had offered CPI to hire purchase customers through Massy United Insurance Limited ("United"), a Barbados-based insurer. United reinsured the risk with Canterbury Insurance Company Limited, a Bermuda-incorporated entity within the same Unicomer group, which ultimately received over 95% of the net premiums. When calculating its corporate income tax for 2007 to 2011, the appellant sought to deduct the CPI premiums of EC$4,450,000 as a legitimate business overhead. The Revenue disallowed the deduction under section 23 of the Income Tax Act, treating United as a mere conduit, and simultaneously levied withholding tax of EC$890,000 on the same sum under section 66.

The Revenue conceded before the Board that, given the High Court's unchallenged finding that United was not a sham or conduit, the assessments as framed were inconsistent with those findings and potentially excessive. Lady Simler, delivering the judgement of the Board, accepted that the Revenue was right to make that concession.

The appellant pressed for the assessments to be quashed entirely. The Board declined. Despite the rejection of the conduit case, it identified features of the evidence capable of engaging section 23 independently. Most significantly, the appellant's audited financial statements, prepared by KPMG, consistently recorded CPI premium payments as flowing directly to Canterbury rather than to United for a period spanning at least seven years. The appellant attributed this to an accounting error, but the High Court judge had found that explanation "wholly incredulous", a conclusion the Board found was plainly open to her. The appellant's own finance director had also admitted to the Revenue that United acted as Canterbury's local agent.

The Board further noted that United paid out only 12.2% of net premiums in claims, with the remaining 87.8% flowing to the related reinsurer, raising questions as to whether the arrangement was commercially normal absent the intra-group connection. These factors, taken together, were sufficient to keep open the possibility of a valid assessment under section 23. The matter was remitted to the Appeal Commissioners, rather than the High Court, on the basis that the Commissioners are the specialist body with appropriate statutory powers under sections 104 and 105 of the Income Tax Act.

The deferred hire purchase payments

The third issue concerned whether income from hire purchase sales accrued for tax purposes at the point the agreement was signed or only as instalments were received. The Revenue had assessed the appellant on the former basis, relying on section 9(1)(b) of the Income Tax Act, which provides that where a commercially recognised accounting system other than the cash basis is regularly followed, income accrues when credited in the taxpayer's books.

The appellant argued that prevailing commercial accounting standards, including the distinction between finance and operating leases under IFRS 16, should govern the analysis and required the Revenue to adduce expert evidence to establish its case.

The Board rejected both arguments. Section 9(1)(b) does not mandate the use of external accounting standards to determine the timing of accrual; it simply identifies the point at which income enters the books as the taxable moment. The appellant's own evidence, including affidavit evidence from its Regional Tax Manager and KPMG partner, confirmed that the full hire purchase price was credited to the books at inception. No distinction was drawn between the books of account and the audited financial statements. The Revenue was therefore plainly entitled to apply section 9(1)(b) without expert evidence.

The appeal on this issue was dismissed. The Board advised His Majesty that the appeal on issues one and two should be allowed only to the extent of remitting those assessments to the Appeal Commissioners, with the third issue dismissed outright.

Legal News desk contact: editorial@solicitorsjournal.com|PLS LogoCopyright & permissions
Service Justice System reform and victim protection
Solicitors Journal

Service Justice System reform and victim protection

Armed Forces Bill reforms Service Justice System powers, victim protections and jurisdictional guidance amid ongoing structural concerns
Opinion11 Jun 2026
Pensions Regulator issues new guidelines
Solicitors Journal

Pensions Regulator issues new guidelines

Yesterday, the Pensions Regulator and the Government released significant publications regarding defined benefit surplus flexibilities for pension schemes
News11 Jun 2026
Inspection of Home Office review process
Solicitors Journal

Inspection of Home Office review process

The Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration is inviting evidence regarding the pre-appeal review process
News11 Jun 2026
Estate of Claudia Edwards Bethel v Attorney General of The Bahamas: Privy Council upholds vicarious liability ruling against immigration authorities
Solicitors Journal

Estate of Claudia Edwards Bethel v Attorney General of The Bahamas: Privy Council upholds vicarious liability ruling against immigration authorities

Bahamian state held liable for immigration officer's false imprisonment and rape of detained Jamaican woman.
Court Report11 Jun 2026
Tian v Refinitiv Limited: High Court refuses anonymity and dismisses World-Check claim for service failures
Solicitors Journal

Tian v Refinitiv Limited: High Court refuses anonymity and dismisses World-Check claim for service failures

Chinese national's challenge to World-Check database entry fails on open justice and CPR service grounds.
Court Report11 Jun 2026
Guilliey v OCAPAC Mauritius: Privy Council dismisses appeal over end-of-year gratuity dispute
Solicitors Journal

Guilliey v OCAPAC Mauritius: Privy Council dismisses appeal over end-of-year gratuity dispute

Employer's 13-instalment salary structure held compliant with Mauritius's End of the Year Gratuity Act 2001.
Court Report11 Jun 2026
Insolvency Service targets fake firms operating
Solicitors Journal

Insolvency Service targets fake firms operating

The Insolvency Service has closed two more companies exploiting the UK register, continuing its crackdown on fraudulent practices
News11 Jun 2026
MSA Properties v The Drapery Northampton: landlord wins access dispute over rotten floor joists
Solicitors Journal

MSA Properties v The Drapery Northampton: landlord wins access dispute over rotten floor joists

High Court grants six-week exclusive possession for structural repairs; counterclaim fails for want of documentary evidence
Court Report10 Jun 2026
Court of Appeal refuses local authority's bid to block return of F, G and H to mother's care
Solicitors Journal

Court of Appeal refuses local authority's bid to block return of F, G and H to mother's care

Three children at centre of care proceedings; supervision order error prompts procedural discussion
Court Report10 Jun 2026
AI use and legal professional privilege risk
Solicitors Journal

AI use and legal professional privilege risk

Judicial guidance highlights risks of privilege loss when AI tools process confidential legal material and advice
Business10 Jun 2026
R (Secretary of State for Justice) v Parole Board: High Court dismisses challenge to refusal to set aside Zenshen release decision
Solicitors Journal

R (Secretary of State for Justice) v Parole Board: High Court dismisses challenge to refusal to set aside Zenshen release decision

Administrative Court finds Parole Board's set aside refusal neither process nor outcome irrational despite attempted theft by life prisoner
Court Report10 Jun 2026
Song v Smith: Court of Appeal clarifies fiduciary duty and unfair prejudice where joint venture has terminated
Solicitors Journal

Song v Smith: Court of Appeal clarifies fiduciary duty and unfair prejudice where joint venture has terminated

Court of Appeal distinguishes maturing business opportunities from future ones in quasi-partnership breakdown dispute
Court Report10 Jun 2026
SJ Interview: Paul Marco
Solicitors Journal

SJ Interview: Paul Marco

Paul Marco, Managing Partner of Trowers & Hamlins, speaks to Solicitors Journal
Interview26 May 2026
When the rules can't keep up
Solicitors Journal

When the rules can't keep up

From Westminster to the courts, the rules are being written faster than they can settle
Foreword1 Jun 2026