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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Tinkler v Revenue & Customs [2019] EWCA Civ 1392 (31 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1392.html Cite as: [2019] 4 WLR 138, [2019] STI 1465, [2019] BTC 22, [2019] STC 1685, [2019] EWCA Civ 1392 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(TAX AND CHANCERY CHAMBER)
JUDGE BERNER AND JUDGE SINFIELD
Appeal number UT/2015/0134
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN
and
SIR BERNARD RIX
____________________
WILLIAM ANDREW TINKLER |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
____________________
Michael Jones (instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor to HM Revenue and Customs) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 16 & 17 July 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hamblen :
Introduction
The legal framework
"9A. Notice of enquiry
(1) An officer of the Board may enquire into a return under section 8 or 8A of this Act if he gives notice of his intention to do so ("notice of enquiry")—
(a) to the person whose return it is ("the taxpayer"),
(b) within the time allowed.
(2) The time allowed is—
(a) if the return was delivered on or before the filing date, up to the end of the period of twelve months after the filing date;
…
(3) A return which has been the subject of one notice of enquiry may not be the subject of another, except one given in consequence of an amendment (or another amendment) of the return under section 9ZA of this Act."
"S115 Delivery and service of documents
(1) A notice or form which is to be served under the Taxes Acts on a person may be either delivered to him or left at his usual or last known place of residence.
(2) Any notice or other document to be given, sent, served or delivered under the Taxes Acts may be served by post, and, if so given, sent, served or delivered to or on any person by the Board, by any officer of the Board, or by or on behalf of any body of Commissioners, may be so served addressed to that person –
(a) at his usual or last known place of residence, or his place of business or employment…"
Factual background
"31. There was no evidence why this change was made but it is I find more likely than not that it was a change made or requested by Mr Mackay, as on the same day Mr Mackay opened or purported to open an enquiry into Mr Tinkler's return for tax year 2003/4. I also find it most likely Mr Mackay amended the TBS without any notification from Mr Tinkler or anyone acting on his behalf: as Heybridge Lane had ceased to be a residence of Mr Tinkler nearly a year before and even the lease had expired six months before, it is most unlikely anyone would give notification to HMRC that Heybridge Lane was still Mr Tinkler's address.
32. .…I accept the appellant's case that the change to the TBS system was made by Mr Mackay without any notification from, or discussions with, Mr Tinkler or anyone on his behalf".
The tribunal decisions
(1) Notice of enquiry to a taxpayer is validly given if received by his agent, provided that the agent has actual or apparent authority to receive notices on behalf of the principal.
(2) BDO did not have apparent or actual authority to receive a notice of enquiry on Mr Tinkler's behalf.
(3) An estoppel by convention had arisen which prevented Mr Tinkler from arguing the preliminary issue and it would be unconscionable for Mr Tinkler to go back on the shared mistaken assumption and deny that HMRC had opened a valid enquiry.
The issues on the appeal
(1) Whether valid notice of a s.9A enquiry was given by the copy notice sent to BDO in the BDO Letter – Issue (1).
(2) If not, whether Mr Tinkler is estopped by convention from denying that HMRC had opened a valid enquiry – Issue (2).
Whether valid notice of a s.9A enquiry was given by the copy notice sent to BDO in the BDO Letter.
(1) BDO did not have actual or apparent authority to receive a notice of enquiry on Mr Tinkler's behalf – ground (i).
(2) Even if BDO had such authority, notice under s.9A must be given to the "taxpayer" and cannot be given to an agent, absent an express agreement with HMRC – ground (ii).
(3) Even if notice could be given to an authorised agent, notice was not validly given as the copy notice provided to BDO for information purposes did not purport to be and was not a s.9A notice – ground (iii).
"1.1 We will prepare your personal tax return together with all supporting schedules and check the Inland Revenue's calculation of your self-assessment tax.
…
1.6 We will deal with the Inland Revenue regarding any amendments required to your return and prepare any amended returns which may be required.
1.7 We will deal with all communications relating to your return addressed to us by the Inland Revenue or passed to us by you.
…
1.10 If work is required which is outside the scope of this letter, for example dealing with Inland Revenue enquiries into your tax return, then this will be a separate engagement for which additional fees will be chargeable."
"4 Dealing with the Inland Revenue
Please sign and return the enclosed Revenue form 64-8, which authorises the Inland Revenue to send us copies of formal notices and will enable us to access your statement of account on line. In practice the Inland Revenue will treat this as authority to correspond with us, in which case they will not correspond with you except to the extent that they are formally required to do so. However, this authority does not apply to all Inland Revenue forms and notices. You should therefore always send us the originals or copies of all communications you receive from the Inland Revenue."
"3. What this authority means
- This authority allows us to exchange information about you with your agent and to deal with them on any matters within the responsibility of the Inland Revenue.
- Once we have received your authority we will start sending letters and forms to your agent. But sometimes we need to send them to you as well as, or instead of, your agent. For the latest information on what forms we send automatically visit our website at www.inlandrevenue.gov.uk/sa/agentlist.htm or contact any Inland Revenue office…"
"Enquiry forms
The Inland Revenue has agreed with the professional bodies that where there is an 'enquiry', the Inland Revenue will correspond with the agent where one is authorised. The practical effect of the agreement is that while a formal notice of enquiry must be given to the client, correspondence can be addressed to the agent."
"116. The clear implication of the website is that HMRC would give notification of an enquiry to the taxpayer and not to the agent. The form 64-8 therefore did not give apparent authority for the agent to receive notification of an enquiry from HMRC because HMRC had said, in something that must be treated as part of the 64-8, that they would not give notice to the agent.
117. The effect of the website must have been that agents would believe that direct notification of an enquiry would be given to their client by HMRC and that therefore they were under no obligation to inform their client of it. Whereas, had that qualification not been made on the website, the agent receiving notification of the enquiry would have no reason to believe that their client had been informed direct by HMRC and they ought to know that they themselves ought pass on the information.
118. If I were to ignore what the website said, and treat BDO as an agent authorised by the 64-8 to receive notice of an enquiry, that would put taxpayers in an unfair position: HMRC could give valid notice of the enquiry to the taxpayer's agent and not to the taxpayer, while at the same time (by the wording on the website) effectively represent to the agent that there was no need for the agent to inform their client of the enquiry because HMRC would have done so direct. That is not right: the effect of the 64-8 saying HMRC would inform the client direct of an enquiry meant that so far as HMRC knew, the agent had no apparent authority to receive notices of enquiry".
"43. Even if the relevant page on the website could be read as saying that notice of an enquiry must only be given to the client, that would amount to nothing more than a representation by HMRC to Mr Tinkler and BDO of what HMRC must do and says nothing about the extent of BDO's apparent authority as agent of Mr Tinkler. BDO's apparent authority is established and its scope defined as far as HMRC are aware by the wording of Form 64-8. As we have already said, the authorisation of BDO to act on Mr Tinkler's behalf in Form 64-8 was in the widest possible terms…."
(1) The UT erred in failing to consider the framework within which Form 64-8 was executed by Mr Tinkler and sent to HMRC in deciding what representation was made by the form.
(2) Anyone who executed that form should have been aware of the contextual limitations imposed by HMRC themselves on the appointment of an agent to deal with matters on the taxpayer's behalf, namely that a formal notice of enquiry was a document which had to be sent to the taxpayer and not to the taxpayer's agent.
(3) One would not, simply by signing and returning a Form 64-8, appoint one's tax adviser as agent to receive a formal notice of enquiry under s.9A, because such documents would not and could not be served on the agent.
(4) If the creator of the form (HMRC) explains to those who are to use the form that they will not send notices of enquiry to the agent appointed, the form cannot be properly understood as a means of notifying the creator that, notwithstanding that, the agent appointed is authorised to receive such notices.
(1) Mr Tinkler's reliance on the guidance notes and website is misplaced and that there is nothing in the material on which he relies which cut down or qualified the breadth of the statement made by Mr Tinkler to HMRC that BDO was authorised to act on his behalf "in connection with any matters within the responsibility of" HMRC.
(2) Since apparent authority is a legal relationship between the principal and the third party which is created by a representation made by the principal to the third party about the scope of the agent's authority, what matters are the representations as to BDO's authority made by Mr Tinkler to HMRC, not the statements made by HMRC in the notes to the Form 64-8.
(3) The statement relied on by Mr Tinkler as cutting down the scope of BDO's apparent authority does not support his argument as it does not say that a notice of enquiry would only be sent to the taxpayer personally and not to his authorised agent.
(4) As this case itself shows, HMRC do in fact send notices of enquiry to both the taxpayer and his agent. HMRC would not do that if it was not considered to be within the scope of the Form 64-8 authority.
Whether Mr Tinkler is estopped by convention from denying that HMRC had opened a valid enquiry.
"Estoppel by convention may arise where both parties to a transaction "act on assumed state of facts or law, the assumption being either shared by both or made by one and acquiesced in by the other." The parties are then precluded from denying the truth of that assumption, if it would be unjust or unconscionable (typically because the party claiming the benefit has been "materially influenced" by the common assumption) to allow them (or one of them) to go back on it."
(1) It is not enough that the common assumption upon which the estoppel is based is merely understood by the parties in the same way. The assumption must be shown to have crossed the line in a manner sufficient to manifest an assent to the assumption.
(2) The expression of the common assumption by the party alleged to be estopped must be such that he may properly be said to have assumed some element of responsibility for it, in the sense of conveying to the other party an understanding that he expected the other party to rely on it.
(3) The person alleging the estoppel must in fact have relied upon the common assumption, to a sufficient extent, rather than merely upon his own independent view of the matter.
(4) That reliance must have occurred in connection with some subsequent mutual dealing between the parties.
(5) Some detriment must thereby have been suffered by the person alleging the estoppel, or benefit thereby have been conferred upon the person alleged to be estopped, sufficient to make it unjust or unconscionable for the latter to assert the true legal (or factual) position.
"Before anyone can be estopped, he must have played such a part in the adoption of the assumption that it would be unfair or unjust if he were left free to ignore it. But the law does not leave such a question of fairness or justice at large. It defines with more or less completeness the kinds of participation in the making or acceptance of the assumption that will suffice to preclude the party if the other requirements for an estoppel are satisfied. A brief statement of the recognised grounds of preclusion is contained in the reasons I gave in Thompson v. Palmer (1933) 49 CLR at page 547, and it is convenient to repeat it: - "whether a departure by a party from the assumption should be considered unjust and inadmissible depends on the part taken by him in occasioning its adoption by the other party. He may be required to abide by the assumption because it formed the conventional basis upon which the parties entered into contractual and other mutual relations, such as bailment; or because he has exercised against the other party rights which would exist only if the assumption were correct, …; or because knowing the mistake the other laboured under, he refrained from correcting him when it was his duty to do so; or because his imprudence, where care was required of him, was a proximate cause of the other party's adopting and acting upon the faith of the assumption; or because he directly made representations upon which the other party founded the assumption.""
(1) There was a shared, mistaken assumption that there was a valid tax enquiry afoot into the Return.
(2) That assumption was communicated by BDO acknowledging the enquiry in its letter of 6 July 2005; the phone calls between HMRC and BDO in November 2005 following up HMRC's chasers for the requested Capital Gains information, and BDO's provision of that information in its letter of 24 November 2005.
(3) BDO acted on the assumption by failing to make a claim which could not be made during an open enquiry and writing in November 2005 with answers to the questions raised by HMRC. HMRC acted on the assumption by pursuing their information requests and not seeking to re-issue the notice of enquiry.
(4) If BDO had not responded to the BDO Letter HMRC would have pursued the matter and this "may well" have led to Mr Tinkler being informed that there was an open enquiry within the enquiry time window, although this "is of course speculative". HMRC's responsibility for the mistake was not relevant and "if BDO had not written to HMRC in the belief that there was a valid enquiry afoot" then it is "more likely than not that HMRC's original error in sending the notice to the wrong address would have been put right". In those circumstances it would be unconscionable for Mr Tinkler to go back on the assumption.
(1) "In our view the letter, dated 6 July 2005, from BDO and further communication in November 2005 do not show that BDO intended HMRC to rely on the correspondence as showing that the enquiry had been validly opened. The communications were simply in response to HMRC's letter of 1 July 2005 to BDO which enclosed the copy of the letter to Mr Tinkler."
(2) "What BDO did was no more than assume that HMRC's assertion (which was itself based on HMRC's assumption as to the position) in the letter of 1 July 2005 to BDO that Mr Tinkler had been given notice of the opening of the enquiry was correct."
(3) "In our view, there is nothing in the FTT's findings that shows that there was "very clear conduct crossing the line" by Mr Tinkler or BDO that was intended to lead HMRC to assume that the enquiry had been validly opened. The nearest that the FTT comes to making such a finding is when it concluded that BDO did not amend Mr Tinkler's return because they believed there was an open enquiry and HMRC did not seek to re-issue the enquiry letter because they believed it had been validly opened. In our view, those facts cannot be described as communication of a shared assumption that the enquiry had been validly opened by very clear conduct. They were not mutually agreed positions and are both equally consistent with a shared common assumption about the validity of the enquiry".
(4) "Nothing done by BDO can in our view be regarded as the conveying by that firm of an understanding as to the validity of the enquiry that BDO expected HMRC to rely on. In our judgment, where one party (in this case, HMRC) conveys its own understanding to another party (BDO, or Mr Tinkler through the agency of BDO), which that other party then relies upon, and conducts itself accordingly, that mere conduct, to the extent that it does not go beyond mere acquiescence or acceptance of the assumption communicated by the first party, cannot confer responsibility on the other party for the expression of the common assumption."
(1) The UT was correct to conclude (i) that it was necessary for the party allegedly estopped to have expressed the assumption in such a way that he might be said to have assumed some element of responsibility for it; (ii) that, on the facts of this case, there was no such assumption of responsibility; and (iii) that in this case there was an absence of the "very clear conduct crossing the line" required for effective communication of a shared assumption by conduct.
(2) The UT was correct to find that it is not unconscionable for Mr Tinkler to rely on the true position (i.e. that no valid notice of enquiry was given) contrary to the parties' assumption. HMRC's argument amounts to this: that if a taxpayer or his agent is misled into assuming the validity of a state of affairs by an assertion made by an officer of HMRC, the taxpayer is responsible for failing to disabuse the Commissioners of the truth of their own assertion, even though he has no knowledge of the reason why the Commissioners' assertion is incorrect.
(1) Contrary to the conclusions of the UT, BDO did more than assume that HMRC's position that an enquiry had been opened was correct. They expressly communicated to HMRC in their letter of 6 July 2005 that they considered that Mr Tinkler's 03/04 tax return was "now the subject of a s.9A TMA 1970 enquiry". The enquiry was also mentioned in an exchange of phone calls between BDO and HMRC in October 2005, and in November 2005 BDO addressed HMRC's information request which accompanied the enquiry letter.
(2) These communications amounted to outward expressions by BDO to HMRC conveying that they shared HMRC's understanding that an enquiry was validly opened. BDO had responsibility for those expressions, and thus the shared assumption, having freely made them to HMRC. Nothing more is required to satisfy the requirement that the assumption be communicated between the parties and the UT erred in concluding otherwise.
(3) The unconscionability in this case lay not in Mr Tinkler seeking to rely on the requirements of s.9A but in his seeking to deny that those requirements had been met by HMRC in circumstances where:
(i) his authorised agents had not only acknowledged the enquiry to HMRC, but then proceeded to participate in it until its conclusion; and
(ii) (ii) as the FTT found, but for BDO responding to HMRC about the enquiry as it did, HMRC would have taken steps that, more likely than not, would have led to Mr Tinkler being validly notified of the enquiry directly.
Conclusion
Sir Bernard Rix:
Lord Justice McCombe: