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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Invicta Foods Ltd v Revenue and Customs [2018] EWCA Civ 2204 (09 October 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/2204.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 2204 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (TAX AND CHANCERY CHAMBER)
David Richards LJ
[2016] UKUT 1 (TCC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
and
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
____________________
INVICTA FOODS LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondent |
____________________
Jonathan Bremner QC (instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor to HM Revenue and Customs) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 19 July 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"Meat and edible offal, of the poultry of heading 01.05, fresh chilled or frozen
- of fowls of the species Gallus domesticus
[…]
- cuts and offal, frozen:
- cuts:
- boneless."
"Other prepared or preserved meat, meat offal or blood:
[…] Of fowls of the species Gallus domesticus:
- containing 57 % or more by weight of poultry meat or offal:
- uncooked."
"This Chapter [i.e. Chapter 16] does not cover meat, meat offal, fish, crustaceans, molluscs or other aquatic invertebrates, prepared or preserved by the processes specified in Chapter 2 or 3 or heading 05.04."
"Uncooked seasoned meats fall in Chapter 16. 'Seasoned meat' shall be uncooked meat that has been seasoned, either in depth or over the whole surface of the product, with seasoning either visible to the naked eye or clearly distinguishable by taste."
"Salt is not considered to be a seasoning within the meaning of this additional note."
"A frozen boneless, skinless chicken breast preparation. It is 92% of raw chicken with an 8% seasoning. The seasoning consists of water, salt, sugar, dextrose and phosphates."
"From the information provided we do not consider the product to be classifiable within Chapter 16 as the ingredients of the brine solution do not necessarily exclude it from Chapter 02. If you wish to continue with this classification request please supply an analytical taste test results of the chicken before and after the solution has been added."
- "Statistically significant differences between the treated and untreated samples were found in terms of mouthfeel (texture), flavour, aftertaste and after feel."
- "The changes in mouthfeel show clearly that the mouthfeel/textural characteristics of the treated sample are very difference [sic] from that of the control. The nature of the changes is consistent with the treated sample as being perceived as a more tender product."
- "The changes in flavour and aftertaste again show clearly that the flavour of the treated sample is very different from that of the control. The changes show increased flavour levels of the overall flavour and individual components (salty, sweet and savoury) in the treated sample."
- "One afterfeel attribute (bits in teeth) was significantly lower in the treated sample, which shows different breakdown characteristics in the mouth."
- "Our overall conclusion is that the treated chicken sample differs substantially from the control sample in terms of the wide range of textural and flavour characteristics."
"When the classification for the chicken breasts was considered, although you provided an informative taste test report, no sample was taken for analysis by HMRC which would have confirmed whether or not the product in question is prepared outside the scope of Chapter 2 of the Combined Nomenclature (CN).
When classifying the chicken to CN heading 1602, the chicken was excluded from Chapter 2 because of the sugar content.
…
As no analysis of the goods was carried out in relation to BTI GB 120015154, the BTI was reviewed.
Based on the evidence provided both at the time of your BTI application and at this review stage, I have concluded that there is no reason to exclude the Brazilian, frozen boneless chicken breast preparations from Chapter 2 and that there is sufficient evidence to suggest that classification to heading 1602 is incorrect."
"164. In our view, the seasoning of the Product was clearly distinguishable by taste. We saw no justification for the suggestion that seasoning had to make the chicken taste different from the normal taste of cooked chicken. Seasoning does not need to be so obtrusive that it masks or changes the underlying flavour. Seasoning is generally intended, in our view, to enhance or accentuate the underlying flavour of meat in order to make it more flavoursome and appetising to the taste. It is true that in some cases seasoning can be so strong that that it overpowers the underlying flavour of the meat or that it imparts a different flavour of its own, but we do not think that it is a necessary for it to do so in order to be "clearly distinguishable by taste."
165. Mr Stokes' evidence was that he did not consider that chicken in its natural state would pick up the salt and sweet characteristics of the Product. Furthermore, we also accept Mr Stokes' evidence that consumers expected chicken to taste as it did after the tumbling process, indicating that the Product had a significantly different taste. Mr Stokes' evidence was that the samples that were sent to Leatherhead for the purposes of testing were of the same specifications as those in respect of which the repayment claims were made. The Leatherhead report stated clearly that the Product had significant differences in taste and aftertaste as regards saltiness, sweetness and savouriness ("umami") from the control sample. This, in our view, established that the Product was seasoned in a way that the seasoning was clearly distinguishable by taste. The report's methodology of comparing the Product against a control sample seemed to us an eminently sensible approach to adopt. Indeed comparing the taste of the Product with a control sample was the approach suggested by HMRC and the actual methodology used was finalised after discussion with HMRC by Mr Stokes."
"11. The note at issue purports to specify what is to be understood by seasoned meat or meat offals within the meaning of the abovementioned Explanatory Notes of the Customs Cooperation Council. In order to do so it lays down criteria for classification based on the sensory analysis of the goods.
12. Those classification criteria comply with the case-law of the Court of Justice according to which, in the interests of legal certainty and ease of verification, goods must be classified on the basis of the objective characteristics and properties of products which can be ascertained when customs clearance is obtained (see, inter alia, the judgment of 16 December 1976 in Case 38/76 Luma v Hauptzollamt Duisburg ((1976)) ECR 2027, paragraph 7).
13. In order to apply criteria such as those set out in the note at issue, there are objective techniques of sensory analysis which have recently been developed and for which national and international standards have been laid down, for example, Standard DIN 10954 in the Federal Republic of Germany and Standard ISO 4120, which the International Organization for Standardization, Geneva, submitted to its member committees in 1982. As the Commission has pointed out, those methods of analysis allow, in particular, the goods as presented for customs clearance to be accurately assessed for the four basic flavours - sweet, acid, salt and bitter - which can be detected, even at very low levels, by a statistically significant population.
14. It is true that in its judgment of 17 March 1983 in Case 175/82, cited above, the Court took the view that a criterion as subjective as taste may not be used to assess the seasoning of meat and that Heading 16.02 of the Common Customs Tariff must be interpreted as meaning that it also includes poultry meat to which salt and pepper have been added even if the pepper can be detected only microscopically.
15. However, it must be pointed out that that judgment was delivered in different circumstances from those in the present case; there was no provision in a regulation on the interpretation of the Common Customs Tariff and at the time of the national authorities' inspection of the goods Standard ISO 4120 had not yet been devised.
16. In those circumstances, it must be concluded that in laying down the abovementioned criteria, the Council did not infringe the principle of legal certainty and did not otherwise exceed the discretionary power conferred on it in that field."
"In order to ensure that customs authorities apply a uniform approach for the purposes of customs classification, it is necessary to lay down methods for determining whether or not uncooked poultry meat is seasoned within the meaning of Additional Note 6(a) to Chapter 2 of the Combined Nomenclature."
"Further support may be derived from the subsequent classification under that heading by the Commission in Regulation No 884/94. Whilst a regulation classifying goods under a particular tariff heading or subheading, being of a legislative nature, cannot have retroactive effect, I pointed out in my Opinion in Siemens that the form of such regulations, which generally state (as is the case with Regulation No 884/94) that classification is determined by the provisions of the general rules for the interpretation of the nomenclature and by the wording of the relevant headings and subheadings, suggests that the legislature takes the view that the classification enacted in fact follows from the legislation already in force."
Lord Justice Kitchin :
Lord Justice Floyd :