Velcro Europe, S.A. is a Spanish manufacturing entity within the Global Velcro Group. As part of its operations, the Company paid royalties for the use of trademarks and proprietary technology owned by the group. The intellectual property was legally held by Velcro Industries B.V., based in Curaçao (Dutch Antilles), while Velcro Holding B.V., incorporated in the Netherlands, functioned as the European licensing and collection intermediary.
Velcro Europe remitted royalty payments to Velcro Holding B.V. (the Dutch entity) and sought an exemption from Spanish withholding tax under the EU Interest and Royalties Directive, treating the Dutch entity as the beneficial owner of the royalty income.
The Spanish tax authorities denied the exemption, contending that Velcro Holding B.V. was a mere conduit with minimal substance, effectively channelling royalty income to the Curacao entity. Accordingly, the authorities levied domestic withholding tax on the royalty payments, without allowing recourse to the Spain–Netherlands double tax agreement (DTA). The taxpayer challenged this assessment, first before the High Court of Justice of Catalonia (which upheld the authorities), and subsequently before the Supreme Court.
Assessee's Contentions | Revenue's Contentions | Supreme Court's Judgment |
|---|---|---|
Velcro Holding B.V. had a legal entitlement to the royalties under the sub-licensing arrangement and therefore qualified as the beneficial owner under the EU Directive. | Velcro Holding B.V. lacked real economic substance and independent decision-making authority, it was merely an interposed entity routing royalties to the Curacao parent. | The Court confirmed that beneficial ownership requires genuine economic substance and autonomous control over the income not merely a contractual or legal entitlement. A conduit entity does not qualify. |
The Dutch entity performed genuine functions in IP licensing and management across Europe, justifying treatment as the beneficial owner with sufficient substance. | The royalties were economically destined for Velcro Industries B.V. in Curacao. The Dutch entity's functions were insufficient to confer beneficial owner status. | Applying a substance-over-form approach aligned with CJEU case law (the Danish cases), the Court found the royalties effectively attributable to the Curacao entity, not the Dutch intermediary. |
Even if the EU Directive exemption were denied, treaty protection under the Spain–Netherlands DTA should be available as a fallback, potentially reducing the withholding tax rate. | The EU Interest and Royalties Directive takes precedence over bilateral tax treaties, if the Directive conditions are not met, treaty protection cannot serve as a secondary relief mechanism. | The Supreme Court held that the EU Directive supersedes tax treaty provisions. Where an exemption is denied due to non-fulfilment of the beneficial ownership condition, the taxpayer cannot fall back on DTA protection. Spain was entitled to levy WHT at the full domestic rate under the Non-Resident Income Tax Act (IRNR). |
Court's Holding -
The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal and upheld the tax authorities' assessment in full. It ruled that:
1) Beneficial ownership under the EU Interest and Royalties Directive requires real economic substance and autonomous decision-making, a conduit structure does not satisfy this test.
2) The EU Directive takes precedence over bilateral tax treaties, and its denial of an exemption forecloses any fallback to treaty-based relief.
3) Consistent with CJEU's guidance in the Danish cases, a substance-over-form analysis must be applied when determining who is the true beneficial recipient of royalty income.
4) Spain was entitled to levy withholding tax at full domestic rate under the Non-Resident Income Tax Act, since the EU Directive conditions were not met.

