March 2019
On 24 January 2019, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) handed down its decision in C-165/17 in a case between Morgan Stanley, a British company, and the French Tax Authorities.
In this case, the French branch of a UK headquartered company (Morgan Stanley) carried out banking and financial transactions for its local clients, in respect of which it had opted to be liable to VAT. It also supplied services to the UK headquarters of the company, in return for which it received transfers. The branch deducted the whole of the VAT incurred on the expenditure attributable to those two categories of services. The French Tax authorities questioned this full deduction of VAT.
The CJEU recognised the deduction of VAT charged on expenditures in France and allocated them to the different services. In allocating the expenditures, the CJEU analysed the nature of the services in both Member States and considered the nature of the services (both taxable services, which give rise to the right to deduct VAT, and exempt services, which do not give rise to the right to deduct VAT).
The CJEU concluded the following:
The CJEU’s Morgan Stanley decision represents an important evolution with respect to the deduction of VAT by financial businesses. As a result, such businesses should review their VAT deductions with an eye to determining whether they are compatible with the CJEU’s Morgan Stanley decision. We will be following this decision with high interest as we await the coming French Administrative High Court decision’s regarding its application within the next few months.
David Hirsch
david.hirsch@avocats-bdo.fr
Rebecca Afana Elanga
rebecca.afanaelanga@avocats-bdo.fr