Apple suffers setback in fight against EU's $14 billion tax order
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[November 09, 2023] By
Foo Yun Chee and Bart H. Meijer
LUXEMBOURG (Reuters) -An EU tribunal made legal errors when it ruled in
favour of Apple over a 13-billion-euro ($14 billion) tax order and
should review the case again, an adviser to Europe's top court said on
Thursday, in a potential setback for the iPhone maker.
The tax case against Apple was part of EU antitrust chief Margrethe
Vestager's crackdown against deals between multinationals and EU
countries that regulators saw as unfair state aid.
The European Commission in its 2016 decision said Apple benefited from
two Irish tax rulings for more than two decades that artificially
reduced its tax burden to as low as 0.005% in 2014.
The European Union's General Court in 2020 upheld Apple's challenge,
saying that regulators had not met the legal standard to show Apple had
enjoyed an unfair advantage.
But advocate General Giovanni Pitruzzella at the EU Court of Justice (CJEU)
disagreed, saying CJEU judges should set aside the General Court ruling
and refer the case back to the lower tribunal.
"The judgment of the General Court on 'tax rulings' adopted by Ireland
in relation to Apple should be set aside," he said in a non-binding
opinion.
He said the General Court committed a series of errors in law and had
also failed "to assess correctly the substance and consequences of
certain methodological errors that, according to the Commission
decision, vitiated the tax rulings".
"It is therefore necessary for the General Court to carry out a new
assessment," Pitruzzella said.
The CJEU, which will rule in the coming months, follows around four in
five such recommendations.
Ireland reiterated that it had not provided any state aid to Apple.
"It is important to bear in mind that this opinion does not form part of
the Court of Justice of the European Union judgment but is considered by
the Court when arriving at its final ruling," Michael McGrath said in a
statement.
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The Apple logo is shown atop an Apple store at a shopping mall in La
Jolla, California, U.S., December 17, 2019, 2019. REUTERS/Mike
Blake/File Photo
"It has always been, and remains, Ireland's position that the
correct amount of Irish tax was paid and that Ireland provided no
state aid to Apple."
While Apple and Dublin appealed against the tax order, Apple
nevertheless had to hand over the full amount, which Ireland has
been holding in an escrow account.
The Irish government has long said that even if it loses the its
appeal and gets to keep the money, other EU member states will make
claims that they are owed some of the back taxes.
"We thank the court for its time and ongoing consideration in this
case. The General Court’s ruling was very clear that Apple received
no selective advantage and no state aid, and we believe that should
be upheld," an Apple spokesperson said.
Vestager has had a mixed record defending her tax cases in court,
with judges backing challenges by automaker Stellantis, Amazon and
Starbucks.
Her biggest legal victory to date came in September when the General
Court upheld her decision against a 700-million-euro Belgian tax
scheme for 55 multinationals. Her tax crackdown has forced EU
countries to scrap such sweetheart deals.
Vestager is currently investigating IKEA brand owner Inter IKEA's
Dutch tax arrangement in a case dating from 2017, Nike's Dutch tax
rulings and Finnish food and drink packaging company Huhtamaki's tax
rulings granted by Luxembourg.
The Apple case is C-465/20 P Commission v Ireland and Others.
($1 = 0.9346 euros)
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