THE SCOTS LAW TIMES REPORTS 1925 EDINBURGH PUBLISHED BY W. GREEN & SON, LIMITED, AT THE OFFICE 2 AND 4 ST GILES STREET REPORTS 1 9 2 5, SCOTS LAW TIMES REPORTED BY W. R. GARSON, Esq.; MAURICE J. KING, Esq., M.A., LL.B.; WILLIAM GARRETT, Esq., B.A., LL.B.; M. G. FISHER, Esq., M.A., LL.B.; J. MACGREGOR, Esq., M.A., LL.B.; T. GRAINGER STEWART, Esq.; A. H. D. GILLIES, Esq., B.A., LL.B.; W. R. WALKER, Esq., M.A., LL.B.; W. G. SKINNER, Esq., M.A., LL.B.; AND T. M. MENZIES, Esq., M.A., LL.B., ADVOCATES. NOTE.—Cases in this volume may be cited 1925, S.L.T. Thus:Summers v. Upper District Committee of the County Council of the County of Renfrew, 1925, S.L.T. 2. 1 REPORTS Sammers (The Lord President, Lords Skerrington, v. Upper Cullen, and Sands.) 25th November 1924. County Council 1. Summers v. Upper District Committee of the of the County Council of the County County of of Renfrew. Renfrew. November 25, Revenue-Income tax— Exemption - Sewers Finance Act, 1921 (11 & 12 Geo. V. cap. 32), section 34 Public Health (Scotland) Act, 1897 (60 & 61 Vict. cap. 38), sections 108 and 108—“ Sewers," defined as sewers maintained by local authority under their statutory duties in relation to public health, exempted from income tax ander Finance Act, 1921, section 84 — Held that the exemption conferred by the Finance Act, 1921, when construed with reference to the statutory powers conferred by sections 103 and 108 of the Public Health (Scotland) Act, 1897, did not include sewage purification works. 1924. sewers Exchequer Cause. The First or Upper District Committee of the County Council of the County of Renfrew appealed to the Commissioners for the General Purposes of the Income Tax Acts and for executing the Acts relating to inhabited house duties for the Upper Ward of Renfrewshire against assessments under Schedule A of the Income Tax Acts for the year ending 5th April 1922 in respect of certain sewers and sewage works. The Commissioners sustained the appeals and discharged the assessments. At the request of the Inspector of Taxes they stated a case for appeal to the Court of Session. The case set forth, inter alia : I. The following facts were admitted : (1) The sewers and sewage works and their annual value as per the Valuation Roll are as follows: Valuation Total of Sewage Valua. Works. tion, Corkerhill £37 £55 Eaglesham 34 62 Elderslie 67 131 Giffinock 179 184 363 Neilston 112 105 217 Newton Mearns 83 100 (2) The sewers and sewage works have been constructed by, and are under the control and jurisdiction of, and are maintained and administered by, the respondents as Local Authority under the Public Health (Scotland) Act, 1897, and Acts explaining and amending the same, and constitute the public sewerage system within the following special drainage districts formed by the respondents under and for the purposes of the Public Health (Scotland) Acts, viz. Corkerbill, Eaglesham, Elderslie, Giffnock, Neilston, and Newton Mearns. (3) The parts of the sewerage system above described as consisting solely of pipes for the conveyance of sewage but without any provision for treatment thereof are exempt under the provisions of section 34 of the Finance Act, 1921, and the assessments would fall to be reduced as follows: Corkerhill to £37 Eaglesham to 34 Elderslie to 67 Giffnock to 184 Neilston to 105 Newton Mearns to 17 (4) It is necessary to treat the crude sewage before discharging it into watercourses in order to avoid producing a nuisance and polluting the stream. The sewage works are placed near the point of outfall for each drainage district. The sewage from the district is conveyed by the sewer pipes to the works in a crude state, and by them it is conveyed at a much slower rate, and while in transit it is subjected, owing to the retardation of flow, to bacterial treatment by which the noxious matters are broken up and neutralised, and the sewage after being passed through the filters and other aerating and purifying processes leaves the works by the outfall channel as a comparatively purified effluent with the exception of a certain quantity of sludge, mud, or grit which remains in the grit chambers or septic tanks. (5) All the sewage works, except those at Newton Mearns, may be described as consisting of pipes or concrete, or built channels, whereby the crude sewage is conveyed from the inlet sewer or Valuation of Sewers. £18 28 64 17 The sewage sewers in the first place to a grit chamber or chambers where, as it passes through, grit from roads and other intractable solid matter is intercepted, and in the next place to the septio tank or tanks, which are concrete covered. in and of considerable size with reference to the normal inflow of sewage, so as to secure that the passage of the sewage through them shall be very slow to allow the bacterial process to operate. From the outfall of the septic tank other pipes or channels convey the partially purified sewage to the filters, where it is mechanically distributed by metal pipes, drums, or channels over the filter beds through which it passes, being aerated and purified in its progress, and on leaving them enters other pipes or channels, by which it is conveyed to the main outlet pipe or channel also forming part of the sewage work, by which it is discharged as a purified effluent into a watercourse. There is also provision whereby in times of rainfall and flood the storm-water overflow is conveyed through storm-water channels to the watercourse direct. (6) Newton Mearns differs from the other works in that when the partially purified effluent leaves the septic tank it is conveyed by artificial channels through a meadow which it irrigates, being aerated and purified in the process, and the purified effluent is by the outfall channel or sewer discharged into a watercourse. Irrigation thus takes the place of filtration. (7) None of these sewage works earns or is capable of earning profit. The sludge is not marketable. They are a source of expense. Even in Newton Mearns the right to dispose of the sewage by irriga tion of the meadow has to be paid for. (8) There is only a small continuing expense involved in maintaining the sewer pipes, but greater expense is incurred at the sewage works, the filters requiring to be periodically cleaned ; and at works such as Giffnock, the wages of a man who is in constant attendance are a necessary charge. II. Mr James A. M'Callum, writer and clerk to the respondents, appeared for them and con tended— (1) That the subjects charged fell within the exemption granted by section 34 of the Finance Act, 1921 ; (2) That the term " sewer" includes not only the pipes but also the purification works necessary for the treatment and dis. posal of the sewage; and that the description of the sewage disposal works and their mode of operation shows that no distinction for the purposes of the Act can be drawn between the pipes and other appliances for disposal of the sewage; (3) That the definition of the term " sewer IST Drv. is to be found in section 103 of the Summers Public Health (Scotland) Act, 1897; v. Upper (4) That in Renfrewshire there are no sewers District running into the sea. is Committee treated in bacterial method and the of the effluent led into a river. The Corpora- County tion of the City of Glasgow has power Council to prevent anyone putting crude of the sewage into any water leading into the County of River Clyde; Renfrew. (5) That the meaning of “ sewers could not Novembor 25, be restricted to the drain-pipes, but that 1924. which themselves include pipes ; -is a sewer within the meaning of land) Act, 1897; and interpreted according to its popular Public Health Acts; profit but are incapable of earning profit liable to assessment to income tax. for the Crown contended : purification works were liable to in come tax; Finance Act, 1921, does not extend to The ex- is defined in subsection 2 of section 34, and the works are not included in the definition ; (3) That the word gewer must be given for carrying off sewage ; buildings and apparatus erected for sewers”; and (Scotland) Act, 1897, did not define sewer, but simply gave a local authority power to lay sewers and erect suitable buildings and apparatus for the disposal of the sewage. facts and arguments submitted to them sewer |