Lennartz v Finanzamt Munchen III: ECJ 11 Jul 1991

(Judgment) Article 20(2) of the Sixth Directive, which concerns adjustments to the deductions of value added tax initially made in respect of capital goods, does no more than establish the procedure for calculating the adjustments to the initial deduction. It cannot therefore give rise to any right to deduct or convert the tax paid by a taxable person in respect of his non-taxable transactions into tax that is deductible within the meaning of Article 17. For it to be applicable, it is necessary for a person to acquire capital goods in his capacity as a taxable person and allocate them to his economic activity within the meaning of Article 4 of the Sixth Directive. However, in such a case the immediate use of the goods for taxable or exempt supplies does not in itself constitute a precondition for its application.
Whether, in a particular case, a taxable person has acquired goods for the purposes of his economic activity within the meaning of Article 4 of the Sixth Directive is a question of fact which must be determined in the light of all the circumstances of the case, including the nature of the goods concerned and the period between the acquisition of the goods and their use for the purposes of the taxable person’ s economic activity.
A taxable person who uses goods for the purposes of an economic activity has the right on the acquisition of those goods to deduct input tax in accordance with the rules laid down in Article 17 of the Sixth Directive, however small the proportion of business use. A rule or administrative practice imposing a general restriction on the right of deduction in cases where there is limited, but none the less genuine, business use constitutes a derogation from Article 17 of the directive and is valid only if the requirements of Article 27(1) or Article 27(5) of the directive are met.

Citations:

C-97/90, [1991] EUECJ C-97/90

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

European

Cited by:

CitedRevenue and Customs v Frank A Smart and Son Ltd SC 29-Jul-2019
The question was whether a taxpayer can deduct as input tax the VAT which it has incurred in purchasing entitlements to an EU farm subsidy, the Single Farm Payment. The taxpayer had used those entitlements to annual subsidies over several years and . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

VAT

Updated: 18 April 2022; Ref: scu.160475