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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Good Law Project Ltd v HM Revenue and Customs & Anor [2019] EWHC 3125 (Admin) (19 November 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/3125.html Cite as: [2019] BVC 50, [2019] STI 1897, [2019] EWHC 3125 (Admin), [2020] STC 145 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
GOOD LAW PROJECT LTD |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS -and- UBER LONDON LTD |
Defendant Interested Party |
____________________
Mr Nigel Pleming QC and Ms Eleni Mitrophanous (instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor for HMRC) for the Defendant
Mr Sam Grodzinski QC (instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills LLP) for the Interested Party
Hearing dates: 6 November 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
"(a) That HMRC disclose to GLP information regarding HMRC's position in relation to Uber London Limited ("ULL"), limited to whether at the date of such disclosure there has been a decision to assess or a decision not to assess ULL for any particular prescribed accounting period ("HMRC's Position");
(b) That GLP shall not disclose the said information for any purpose;
(c) That a non-party may not obtain a copy of HMRC's Acknowledgment of Service; and
(d) That time limits for HMRC to file an Acknowledgment of Service under CPR part 45.8(2)(a) be extended to 21 days after determination of this application."
(1) Revenue and Customs officials may not disclose information which is held by the Revenue and Customs in connection with a function of the Revenue and Customs.
(2) But subsection (1) does not apply to a disclosure—
(a) which—
(i) is made for the purposes of a function of the Revenue and Customs, and
(ii) does not contravene any restriction imposed by the Commissioners
…,
(c) which is made for the purposes of civil proceedings (whether or not within the United Kingdom) relating to a matter in respect of which the Revenue and Customs have functions,
…
(e) which is made in pursuance of an order of a court
(1) A person commits an offence if he contravenes section 18(1) or (2A) or 20(9) by disclosing revenue and customs information relating to a person whose identity—
(a) is specified in the disclosure, or
(b) can be deduced from it.
…
(3) It is a defence for a person charged with an offence under this section of disclosing information to prove that he reasonably believed—
(a) that the disclosure was lawful, or
(b) that the information had already and lawfully been made available to the public
"Not only is there no express or implied provision in the legislation upon which such a right could be claimed but to allow it would be subversive of the whole system, which involves that the commissioners' duties are to the Crown, and that matters relating to income tax are between the commissioners and the taxpayer concerned. No other person is given any right to make proposals about the tax payable by any individual: he cannot even inquire as to such tax. The total confidentiality of assessments and of negotiations between individuals and the revenue is a vital element in the working of the system. As a matter of general principle I would hold that one taxpayer has no sufficient interest in asking the court to investigate the tax affairs of another taxpayer or to complain that the latter has been under-assessed or over-assessed: indeed, there is a strong public interest that he should not. And this principle applies equally to groups of taxpayers: an aggregate of individuals each of whom has no interest cannot of itself have an interest."
Lastly, I wish to comment shortly upon the duty of confidence owed by the revenue to every taxpayer and the right to discovery. The duty of confidence can co-exist with the duty of fairness owed to the general body of taxpayers. It is, however, of great importance when discovery is sought by an applicant, as happened in this case. Upon general principles, discovery should not be ordered unless and until the court is satisfied that the evidence reveals reasonable grounds for believing that there has been a breach of public duty: and it should be limited strictly to documents relevant to the issue which emerges from the affidavits. The revenue in any event will have the right in respect of certain classes of document to plead " public interest immunity," of which in a proper case the court will be the arbiter: Burmah Oil Co. Ltd. v. Governor and Company of the Bank of England [1980] A.C. 1090.
The appellants are responsible for the overall management of the relevant part of the taxation system of this country, and for the assessment and collection of taxes from those who are, by law, liable to pay them. Such assessment and collection is a confidential matter between the appellants and each individual taxpayer. Such confidence is allowed to be broken only in those exceptional circumstances for which the statute makes express provision
17. Unfortunately the courts below were not referred (or were only scarcely referred) to the common law of confidentiality. The duty of confidentiality owed by HMRC to individual taxpayers is not something which sprang fresh from the mind of the legislative drafter. It is a well established principle of the law of confidentiality that where information of a personal or confidential nature is obtained or received in the exercise of a legal power or in furtherance of a public duty, the recipient will in general owe a duty to the person from whom it was received or to whom it relates not to use it for other purposes. The principle is sometimes referred to as the Marcel principle, after Marcel v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis[1992]Ch 225. In relation to taxpayers, HMRCs entitlement to receive and hold confidential information about a person or a company's financial affairs is for the purpose of enabling it to assess and collect (or pay) what is properly due from (or to) the taxpayer. In R v Inland Revenue Commissioners, Ex p National Federation of Self-Employed and Small Businesses Ltd [1982] AC617, 633, Lord Wilberforce said that the whole system . . . involves that . . . matters relating to income tax are between the commissioners and the taxpayer concerned…
18. The Marcel principle may be overridden by explicit statutory provisions. In In re Arrows Ltd (No 4) [1995] 2 AC 75, 102, Lord Browne Wilkinson said: In my view, where information has been obtained under statutory powers the duty of confidence owed on the Marcel principle cannot operate so as to prevent the person obtaining the information from disclosing it to those persons to whom the statutory provisions either require or authorise him to make disclosure.
19. Subsections (2)(b) et seq of section 18 contain specific provisions permitting the disclosure of taxpayer information for various purposes other than HMRC's primary function of revenue collection and management. What then is the proper interpretation of the far broader words or subsection (2)(a)(i) "disclosure … made for the purposes of a function" of HMRC? On HMRC's interpretation, it would be hard to conceive a wider expression. By taking section 5, 9 and 51(2) in combination, it is said to include anything which in the view of HMRC is necessary or expedient or incidental or conducive to or in connection with the exercise of the functions of the collection and management of revenue. If that is the right interpretation of subsection (2)(a)(i), it means that a number of the subsequently listed specific exceptions are otiose, including (c) and (d), which deal with disclosure for the purposes of civil or criminal proceedings relating to matters connected with customs and excise. Secondly, and more fundamentally, it means that the protection which would otherwise have been provided to the taxpayer by HMRC's duty of confidentiality will have been very significantly eroded by words of the utmost vagueness. So to construe the words would run counter to the principle of construction known as the principle of legality, after Lord Hoffman's use of the term in R v Secretary of state for the Home Office, Ex p Simms [2000]2 AC 115, 131."
34. ….Nevertheless, in my judgment any such application would have been firmly rejected, on the basis that the fundamental principle of public justice enshrined in Article 6(1) of the Convention, and long established in the English common law, would have decisively outweighed the very limited interference with Dr Banerjee's right to respect for her private life, and the very limited disclosure of information relating to her personal financial affairs, that a public hearing would entail. I will assume in Dr Banerjee's favour at this point that her relevant rights of privacy and confidentiality had not already been irretrievably lost by reason of the public hearing of her previous appeal to the Commissioners. Making that assumption, I would accept that her Article 8(1) rights were engaged. In my opinion any taxpayer has a reasonable expectation of privacy in relation to his or her financial and fiscal affairs, and it is important that this basic principle should not be whittled away. However, the principle of public justice is a very potent one, for reasons which are too obvious to need recitation, and in my judgment it will only be in truly exceptional circumstances that a taxpayer's rights to privacy and confidentiality could properly prevail in the balancing exercise that the court has to perform.
35. It is relevant to bear in mind, I think, that taxation always has been, and probably always will be, a subject of particular sensitivity both for the citizen and for the executive arm of government. It is an area where public and private interests intersect, if not collide; and for that reason there is nearly always a wider public interest potentially involved in even the most mundane-seeming tax dispute. Nowhere is that more true, in my judgment, than in relation to the rules governing the deductibility of expenses for income tax. Those rules directly affect the vast majority of taxpayers, and any High Court judgment on the subject is likely to be of wide significance, quite possibly in ways which may not be immediately apparent when it is delivered. These considerations serve to reinforce the point that in tax cases the public interest generally requires the precise facts relevant to the decision to be a matter of public record, and not to be more or less heavily veiled by a process of redaction or anonymisation. The inevitable degree of intrusion into the taxpayer's privacy which this involves is, in all normal circumstances, the price which has to be paid for the resolution of tax disputes through a system of open justice rather than by administrative fiat.
However, case after case has recognised that the guiding principle is the need for justice to be done in the open and that courts at all levels have an inherent jurisdiction to allow access in accordance with that principle. Furthermore, the open justice principle is applicable throughout the United Kingdom, even though the court rules may be different.
…
[37] So what were those principles? The purpose of open justice "is not simply to deter impropriety or sloppiness by the judge hearing the case. It is wider. It is to enable the public to understand and scrutinise the justice system of which the courts are the administrators" (para 79)…."
The submissions
Conclusions