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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Daniel v Revenue and Customs [2012] EWCA Civ 1741 (21 December 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1741.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1741 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
UPPER TRIBUNAL (TAX AND CHANCERY CHAMBER)
Upper Tribunal Judge Bishopp
TCC/JR/05/2011
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
MR JUSTICE MORGAN
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Paul Daniel |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs |
Respondent |
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Akash Nawbatt and Christopher Stone (instructed by Solicitors Office, HMRC) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 19 July 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
"2. The appellant, by Mr Philip Coppel QC, argued vigorously that he should be given permission, and that his judicial review application should be heard first. A judicial review hearing would take no more than two days, and could be determined on the facts as they are set out in the appellant's witness statement. The only question to be determined was whether, on those facts (which would be assumed to be correct for that purpose) the Commissioners had failed to apply their own published guidance, IR20, correctly. An outcome favourable to the appellant would compel the respondents to think again, and therefore make a fresh decision. This was the most economical and effective course.
3. The respondents, through Mr Akash Nawbatt, argued equally vigorously that the judicial review application could not be decided on assumed facts, since the appellant had, as a necessary pre-condition, to show that he fell within the terms of IR20. That was an issue of fact which had to be determined after hearing live evidence; it could not be done on assumed facts when those facts were disputed. It was nothing to the point that the judicial review might take no more than two days on assumed facts; the matter simply could not proceed on assumed facts. A detailed enquiry into the facts could not be avoided and it was for the First-tier Tribunal to undertake that enquiry. Indeed, the Commissioners go further in arguing that I should not even give permission for judicial review since unless the appellant can show that the impugned decision was irrational (which he does not even attempt) his application is bound to fail.
4. I was referred by both parties to observations of the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court in R (Davies) v Revenue and Customs Commissioners and R (Gaines-Cooper) v Revenue and Customs Commissioners ([2010] STC 860 and [2011] STC 2249 respectively) about the sequence in which hearings should take place in cases of this kind. It does not seem to me that any of the judges was seeking to lay down a hard and fast rule. There will inevitably be some cases in which there is no dispute about any relevant fact, and others in which the facts are hotly disputed, and yet more in between. The appropriate course must inevitably be determined on a case-by-case basis.
5. Assuming permission to seek judicial review is to be granted (a topic with which I shall deal shortly) I have come to the conclusion that the appropriate course in this case is for the tax appeal to be heard first. I am not unmindful of Mr Coppel's argument that a judicial review hearing would be shorter, which I am sure is correct provided there is no significant dispute about the facts. But I am persuaded that there is a significant factual dispute, which the Upper Tribunal will be unwilling to resolve itself, and that there is in consequence a real risk that, if I adopted Mr Coppel's preferred course, the Upper Tribunal would either be embarrassed by a factual dispute, or, having taken greater stock of its scale than I am able to do in the context of this application, feel obliged to revisit the order of proceeding and direct after all that the tax appeal should be heard first. There would be substantial wasted costs. I recognise that there are cogent arguments on both sides, but in balancing them on a pragmatic basis I am satisfied that the scales fall in favour of disposing of the tax appeal first."
"If you leave the UK to work full-time abroad under a contract of employment, you are treated as not resident and not ordinarily resident if you meet all the following conditions
- your absence from the UK and your employment abroad both last for at least a whole tax year
- during your absence any visits you make to the UK
- total less than 183 days in any tax year, and
- average less than 91 days a tax year. (The average is taken over the period of absence up to a maximum of four years – see paragraph 2.10. Any days spent in the UK because of exceptional circumstances beyond your control, for example the illness of yourself or a member of your immediate family, are not normally counted for this purpose.)"
"In the judicial review proceedings it is essential that the fact of full-time employment abroad is established by the applicant, either as a finding by the tribunal hearing the case or by agreement. That is a condition on qualification laid down by IR 20. At present, according to the papers before me, HMRC are not agreeing that fact."
We were told that in that case the claim for judicial review was withdrawn after the facts had been found by the First tier Tribunal. In R (on the application of Lower Mill Estate Ltd and Conservation Builders v HMRC [2008] BTC 5743, Blake J recognised that it was the normal course of events for a statutory appeal to precede a judicial review hearing, with necessary findings of fact made in the more appropriate fact finding jurisdiction. At paragraph 33 of his judgment Blake J observed that, in that case, the findings of fact might be decisive to a determination of whether there was any legitimate expectation at all; without the necessary facts being found, the court hearing the judicial review claim "would be moving somewhat blindly in a sensitive field of public law administration". I do not say that that would always be the case. The position will be different where the Judicial Review claim requires no resolution of disputed facts and has the potential finally to dispose of the underlying dispute between the taxpayer and HMRC. Lord Wilson thought that that was the position in relation to the case of Mr Gaines-Cooper – see R (Davies) and Gaines-Cooper v Revenue and Customs Commissioners [2011] 1 WLR 2625 at 2630, paragraph 6. Had Mr Gaines-Cooper's contention in his claim for judicial review prevailed, to the effect that he had only to show that he had kept his day count in the UK below 91 days, the ten day hearing of his appeal before the Special Commissioners (which would now be heard by the First tier Tribunal Tax Chamber) would have been unnecessary. Beyond this, I do not think that it is possible to give useful guidance. Despite his own protestation as to the lack of clarity concerning the correct approach, Upper Tribunal Judge Bishopp seems to me to have approached his task in exactly the manner which I would have expected, and in the manner which seems to me appropriate.
Mr Justice Morgan :
Lord Justice Rix :