BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Derrin Brother Properties Ltd, R (on the application of) v HM Revenue and Customs & Ors [2014] EWHC 1152 (Admin) (15 April 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2014/1152.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 1152 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN On the Application of DERRIN BROTHER PROPERTIES LIMITED |
Claimant |
|
and |
||
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS And HSBC BANK PLC LUBBOCK FINE LLP |
Defendant Interested Parties |
____________________
Miss Julie Anderson (instructed by Solicitor and General Counsel to the Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 27 March 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE SIMLER DBE :
Introduction
(a) Whether on a proper interpretation of the provisions in Sch. 36 there was any breach of the requirements of Sch. 36 FA 2008 so as to invalidate the giving of the Notices by HMRC; and/or
(b) Whether the Tribunal acted in breach of article 6 of the European Convention of Human Rights ("ECHR") (right to a fair hearing) when taken in conjunction with article 8 (right to respect for private and family life) and/or article 1 to the First Protocol (protection of property) ("A1P1") as given effect by the Human Rights Act 1998 ("HRA 1998").
The applicable legal principles
"Exchange of information
1 The competent authorities of the Contracting States shall exchange such information as is foreseeably relevant to the administration or enforcement of the provisions of this Convention or of the domestic laws of the Contracting States concerning taxes to which this Convention applies insofar as the taxation under those laws is not contrary to this Convention. The exchange of information is not restricted by Article 1 of this Convention. Any information received by a Contracting State shall be treated as secret in the same manner as information obtained under the domestic law of that State and shall be disclosed only to persons or authorities (including courts and administrative bodies) concerned with the assessment or collection of, the enforcement or prosecution in respect of, or the determination of appeals in relation to, the taxes to which this Convention applies. Such persons or authorities shall use the information only for such purposes. They may disclose the information in public court proceedings or in judicial decisions.
2 If information is requested by a Contracting State in accordance with this Article, the other Contracting State shall obtain that information in the same manner and to the same extent as if the tax of the first-mentioned State were the tax of that other State and were being imposed by that other State, notwithstanding that the other State may not, at that time, need such information for the purposes of its own tax.
3 In no case shall the provisions of paragraphs 1 or 2 of this Article be construed so as to impose on a Contracting State the obligation:
(a) to carry out administrative measures at variance with the laws or the administrative practice of that or of the other Contracting State;
(b) to supply information which is not obtainable under the laws or in the normal course of the administration of that or of the other Contracting State; …"
"reasonably required by the officer for the purpose of checking the tax position of another person whose identity is known to the officer ("the taxpayer")" (para. 2(1)).
The notice can be enforced only in respect of documents in the possession or power of the recipient of the notice (para. 18).
"(3) The tribunal may not approve the giving of a… third party notice unless –
(a) an application for approval is made by, or with the agreement of an authorised officer of Revenue and Customs,
(b) the tribunal is satisfied that, in the circumstances, the officer giving the notice is justified in doing so,
(c) the person to whom the notice is to be addressed has been told that the information or documents referred to in the notice are required and given a reasonable opportunity to make representations to an officer of Revenue and Customs,
(d) the tribunal has been given a summary of any representations made by that person, and
(e) in the case of a third party notice, the taxpayer has been given a summary of the reasons why an officer of Revenue and Customs requires the information and documents."
The Facts
"6. The ATO request indicated that official investigations were being conducted into Mr Vanda Russell Gould (VRG), his associates and his clients and that those investigations had revealed that a UK resident firm of accountants, Lubbock Fine LLP of City Road, London, were providing nominee directors and shareholders to UK incorporated companies that were beneficially owned by relevant Australian residents. The supporting documents suggested that by way of a series of complex arrangements involving these companies and other entities and persons in other jurisdictions, the Australian residents had avoided substantial amounts of tax which would have been otherwise payable and had failed to provide documents under formal request that were required for the purposes of establishing beneficial ownership and/or company residence in Australia. Specifically the concerns of the ATO were:
(a) That some or all of the UK registered companies may be considered to be tax resident in Australia as their effective management and control rests with Australian resident taxpayers,
(b) that interest payments claimed as deductions against profits by various Australian resident taxpayers who are associated either with VRG and/or John Leaver or with clients of theirs may not be properly allowable,
(c) that income properly payable to Australian resident taxpayers and declarable for tax purposes has not been so declared,
(d) that schemes of arrangement have been set up by which substantial sums have been artificially diverted from the accounts of Australian resident taxpayers and, in some cases, loaded back via offshore companies controlled by VRG and/or Lubbock Fine leading to a substantial loss of tax,
(e) that sums remitted from offshore companies controlled by VRG and/or Lubbock Fine represent the taxable income of VRG and clients and associates,
(f) that sums remitted from offshore companies controlled by VRG and/or Lubbock Fine and paid direct to travel agents and to educational institutions represent taxable emoluments in respect of VRG and clients and associates,
(g) that clients of VRG have engaged in activities by which "back to back" loan facilities were arranged to disguise the taxable nature of substantial remittances which arose from offshore companies controlled by VRG and/or Lubbock Fine and
(h) that several of these companies are trading in shares listed on the Australian Securities Exchange and by falsely claiming non-resident statue they avail themselves of concessions to exempt the profits derived from being subject to capital gains tax in certain circumstances.
The ATO provided an analysis that showed estimated tax at risk on about AUD230m of income.
7. In addition, the ATO request sought information held by the UK resident banks, HSBC Bank plc, Lloyds TSB Bank plc and Barclays Bank plc. The request indicated that the documents were reasonably required from the banks and from Lubbock Fine LLP for reasons that included the following:
(a) the determination of the beneficial ownership of identified entities and the sources of funds used to conduct transactions including those mentioned above,
(b) the establishment of any false claims to interest relief,
(c) the determination of residence of various entities; and
(d) the identification of any undeclared income."
"It is my belief that the entities noted above may hold information that is directly relevant to your tax and financial affairs and that, in particular albeit without prejudice to the general nature of the ATO enquiries that:
(a) sums remitted from companies controlled by or on behalf of yourself may represent taxable income,
(b) that sums remitted from companies controlled by or on behalf of yourself and paid directly to other parties and institutions may represent taxable emoluments and
(c) that companies controlled by or on your behalf may properly be resident in Australia for tax purposes."
"to avoid unnecessary, time-consuming disputes after receipt of a further communication from the ATO that provided further specific information on the identity of the taxpayers, I issued further letters to each of the parties noted …"
In other words, he treated them as "taxpayers" for the purposes of Sch.36 paras.2 and 3.
"Important to my reasoning in this regard was the fact that the evidence held by me suggested that the three companies were beneficially owned by Mr Vanda Russell Gould who was the principal focus of the ATO enquiries in that it was believed he had benefited personally from arrangements entered into as well as promoting such arrangements to certain clients of his. I was therefore able to draw a distinction between these three companies and other companies about whom the ATO had requested information. These three were beneficially owned by Mr Gould, whereas the other companies were beneficially owned by clients of Mr Gould and/or Mr Leaver (who was also considered to be involved in promoting the scheme). I duly issued reasons letters to the [Three Claimants] on 16 November 2012."
"The application originally came before me on 19 September 2012. The day before that, HMRC received certain representations from solicitors acting for a number of taxpayers whose affairs are the subject of the relevant enquiries. Those representations were settled by UK tax counsel. HMRC provided a copy of the representations to the Tribunal, and sought an adjournment of the application so that they could be fully considered by HMRC."
This paragraph appears in the introductory section of the Decision, and sets out the immediate chronology leading to the hearing before the Judge. It does not purport to make findings of fact and I cannot accept that this is a fair reading of it. Indeed the Judge expressly states (at paragraph 6) that the Decision does not record his reasons for finding that the relevant conditions were satisfied. Moreover, Bishop & Sewell's written representations to the Tribunal (of 18 September 2012) defined the Three Claimants as "the Taxpayers" and described their representations as "Taxpayers' Summary of Representations". It is not surprising that the Judge described them as such at paragraph 2 in the circumstances. This was not in any sense a finding of fact as Ms McCarthy submitted.
The Issues
Ground 1: On a proper interpretation of Sch.36 FA 2008, the Notices have not been validly issued by HMRC.
(a) The sequence of events described above in which the Three Claimants came to be regarded by Mr Pandolfo as "taxpayers" does not in my judgment support any inference that they are a randomly selected group, nor is it a coincidence that only these three objected. These companies were two out of only five claimants in connected proceedings challenging the ATO in Australia. Lubbock Fine wrote to HMRC about all five by letter dated 11 June 2012; and Henry Davis York were acting for three entities included in the 21 Claimant group and had been able to take instructions from them in time to make representations to HMRC by letter dated 2 July 2012. That only three subsequently complained is consistent with those three being the particular entities with a justifiable case that they were in fact taxpayers whose tax positions were being checked. There was nothing to stop the other 21 doing so, but they did not.
(b) Moreover, Mr Pandolfo makes clear that there is a factual distinction between the Three Claimants and the 21 Claimants, because unlike the rest, the Three Claimant companies were beneficially owned by Mr Gould who was the principal focus of the ATO enquiries, believed to have benefited personally from arrangements entered into, as well as promoting such arrangements to his clients who were the beneficial owners of the remaining companies. This direct connection with the main target of the ATO investigation plainly distinguishes the Three from the 21.
(c) Nor does the mere fact that information or documents might be relevant to the tax affairs of the 21 Claimants (because their residence status forms part of the broader investigation) mean that they are the immediate focus of the information notice. The immediate focus of the notices, and therefore the persons whose tax positions were being checked, were Gould, Leaver and companies or persons directly connected with them.
(d) Judge Berner, who had significantly more information available to him both from the ATO and from HMRC, was satisfied that in this case the taxpayers had been given summary reasons in compliance with the statutory condition at para.3(3)(e). Nothing in the evidence or submissions is irreconcilable with this conclusion or demonstrates that he was wrong so to conclude.
(a) that HMRC had received a request from the ATO and that under the provisions of the Double Tax Agreement, HMRC is making enquiries into aspects of the taxpayer's tax affairs;
(b) that third parties are to be given formal notices requiring of information and documents subject to approval by the Tribunal;
(c) that the officer believed that the third parties may hold information that is directly relevant to the taxpayer's affairs and in particular that the taxpayer may be liable to tax;
(d) that liability to tax in the case of Derrin Brothers was in respect of buying and selling shares and interest and that you may be resident in Australia for tax purposes;
(e) that liability to tax in the case of Indo-Suez Investments Ltd was in respect of buying and selling shares, interest payments and underwriting fees;
(f) that liability to tax in the case of CT Ltd was in relation to profits derived from buying and selling shares.
Ground 2: whether there has been a breach of article 6 ECHR when read in conjunction with article 8 and/or A1P1
"32 … [Ravon] was concerned with the question whether there was any effective right of judicial review Judicial review must be available in respect of both the law and facts on the lawfulness of the decision authorising searches and seizures and any effective action is taken In Ravon, the decision to authorise the search and seizure had been taken by tribunal following an ex parte application by the French tax administration. That decision was appealable before the Cour de Cassation (the French Supreme Court) on a point of law but no other judicial remedy was available. In particular, there was no available challenge to the factual basis of the decision.
33 In two judgements in the field of competition law (Primagaz v France (2961/08) and Groupe Canal Plus and Sport Plus v France (29408/08)) the European Court of Human Rights applied Ravon. A process whereby an authorisation order could be appealed, in both law and fact, to the Court of Appeal in France was accepted as valid. It was the transitional arrangements from the former procedure, which resembled that in Ravon, that contravened article 6(1).
34 In the case of approvals of notices under FA 2008, Sch.36, there is only a limited right of appeal against a third party notice, and it is in favour of the third party and not the taxpayer (Sch.36, para.30). It applies only where the ground of appeal is that the notice would be unduly onerous, and it does not apply to a taxpayer's statutory records.
35 However a taxpayer in respect of whose tax affairs an information notice is approved is not without a remedy. He can seek judicial review. That review is not in the nature of an appeal on a point of law; it can consider both the law and the underlying facts. The position is thus very different from the limited rights that were available to the French taxpayer in Ravon. Even if I were not bound by higher authority in the UK courts, I would conclude that the Sch.36 procedure does not deprive the taxpayer of an effective remedy. "
(a) They have been provided with a copy of the Decision which addresses three significant points of objection to the proposed notices made in written representations prior to the approval hearing by the Three Claimants.
(b) They have had disclosure of the Notices and other documents relevant to their approval, together with witness statements from Mr Pandolfo and Mr Orchard. Whilst this does not amount, entirely understandably in the circumstances already described, to full disclosure of all material relevant to the investigation, it is sufficient to enable them to know what is sought and from whom and the reason it is said to be required.
(c) In the circumstances, since they must know what documents of theirs are held in the possession of Lubbock Fine LLP (and others), and how and in what way they are admittedly connected with the taxpayers whose tax position is the immediate focus of the investigation, they are well placed to know what factual basis there might be for opposing these Notices.
(d) Consequently, whilst they have not had the opportunity to make written representations to the Tribunal as to why their Convention rights should not be interfered with or to participate in the Tribunal hearing (again for entirely understandable and amply justifiable reasons as discussed above), they have had those opportunities on judicial review in this court.
(e) Moreover, they will not be subject to any measure taken against them arising out of or in consequence of the document notices or documents obtained by HMRC or the ATO without the legal right of challenge under article 6 compliant procedures.