PAYE not held on trust for Inland Revenue – Supreme Court
PAYE not held on trust for Inland Revenue – Supreme Court
10 November 2014
The Supreme Court, in a judgment released last Friday,1 has overruled the Court of Appeal by deciding that the IRD stands behind liquidators and employees when cash is available in liquidation and PAYE is owed.
This decision, which upholds the payment waterfall in Schedule 7 of the Companies Act, will be welcomed by insolvency practitioners after the Court of Appeal had upset previous industry practice.
Context
The case
involved the relationship between section 167 of the Tax
Administration Act and Schedule 7 of the Companies Act.
Section 167 creates a trust over PAYE deducted from payments
to employees. For background, see our previous commentary, IRD plays PAYE trump card
– and wins.
Prior to the Court of Appeal’s decision, it was generally accepted that, in a liquidation, PAYE should be paid to the Inland Revenue only after insolvency practitioners’ fees and employees’ wages had first been paid under Schedule 7.
The Commissioner of Inland Revenue argued that credit balances in a company’s bank accounts at the time of liquidation were held in trust for the Commissioner and did not form part of a company’s assets available to creditors.
The Supreme Court
The
Supreme Court was not prepared to allow unpaid PAYE to sit
outside of the Schedule 7 priority regime. To do so would
allow the IRD to effectively “leapfrog” ahead of
preferential creditors when in fact the IRD’s claims rank
below those creditors.2 The Court ruled that any trust
established by the Tax Administration Act is extinguished on
the appointment of liquidators.
The Supreme Court’s
rejection of the Court of Appeal’s narrow interpretation
of the Tax Administration Act is welcome. The Court has
confirmed the application of the settled and well-understood
priority scheme for payments in Schedule 7. Unpaid PAYE
will still rank ahead of most debts owed by the employer.
Our thanks to James McMillan for writing this Brief
Counsel.
Footnotes
1 Jennings
Roadfreight Limited (in liquidation) v Commissioner of
Inland Revenue [2014] NZSC 160
2 See [29] of
the
judgment
ENDS