High Court to rule on €1.64bn Perrigo tax case next week

Judgment could have major implications well beyond the drug company

Irish-headquartered Perrigo wants the court to quash the Revenue’s 2018 assessment. Photograph: Adam Bird/Bloomberg
Irish-headquartered Perrigo wants the court to quash the Revenue’s 2018 assessment. Photograph: Adam Bird/Bloomberg

A High Court judge will give judgment next week on a significant action by drug company Perrigo against the Revenue and State aimed at overturning a €1.64 billion tax assessment.

Mr Justice Denis McDonald’s decision next Wednesday could have significant implications well beyond Perrigo and the hearing was closely monitored by large companies and tax consultants.

Irish-headquartered Perrigo, which bought Irish pharma group Elan in 2013, wants the court to quash the 2018 assessment raised against it after a Revenue audit in 2016.

It has separately appealed the assessment to a Tax Appeals Commissioner but says it cannot get a fair hearing of that appeal for reasons including non-availability of documents relating to tax issues over years and the death of Elan chief executive Donal Geaney in 2005.

READ SOME MORE

In opposing the judicial review proceedings, heard over seven days last June, the respondents said Perrigo owes the €1.64 billion because of its purchase of Elan in 2013 and the latter's sale eight months previously of its multiple sclerosis drug, Tysabri to Biogen, its partner in the drug's development.

Perrigo bought Elan by way of corporate inversion, involving foreign companies reversing themselves into Irish businesses to secure an Irish domicile and lower corporate tax rate.

Because Biogen paid for Tysabri with an upfront sum and the promise of future royalties depending on sales, Revenue says it should have been treated as a capital gain, taxable at 33 per cent.

Perrigo treated it as tradable income in its Irish tax return, subject to a 12.5 per cent tax rate, and maintains this is consistent with how Elan reported purchase and sale of Intellectual Property (IP) rights to medicines over years.

Perrigo argued the tax treatment of Elan’s sales of IP over some two decades meant Revenue was not entitled to raise that assessment in 2018 and Perrigo had a legitimate expectation it would not do so. The legitimate expectation claim is based, inter alia, on a Shannon Free Trade Area tax certificate issued to Elan in 2002, backdated to 1997.

The certificate expired in 2005 but Perrigo claims it was represented to it that existing certified activities would continue to be treated as they were during the Shannon regime.

It has also alleged unfairness, abuse of power and an unjust attack on its property rights.

Revenue argument

During the hearing, Gráinne Clohessy SC, for Revenue, argued, if Perrigo was correct in its claims, that would “set at nought” the self-assessment system of taxation involving the taxpayer assessing their own tax liability and the Revenue processing returns in a non-judgmental manner.

The Revenue and State also disputed any abuse of power or unjust attack on property rights, arguing the right to property is not absolute but can be limited in the interests of the common good.

Paul Sreenan SC, closing the case for Perrigo, said this was the only case where Revenue has “gone back” on a Shannon area tax certificate. Revenue cannot say Perrigo’s rights are protected by the right of appeal to the TAC because a valid assessment is the foundation of any such appeal and this assessment was not valid, he argued.

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan is the Legal Affairs Correspondent of the Irish Times