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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> The Advocate General For Scotland v. Montgomerey [2007] ScotCS CSOH_120 (10 July 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSOH_120.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotCS CSOH_120, [2007] CSOH 120

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2007] CSOH 120

 

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LADY PATON

 

in the cause

 

THE ADVOCATE GENERAL FOR SCOTLAND

 

Pursuer;

 

against

 

DENNIS HENRY MONTGOMERY

 

Defender:

 

 

­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­________________

 

 

 

Pursuer: Artis, Advocate; H M Milne, Solicitor (Scotland) H M Revenue & Customs

Defender: Party

 

10 July 2007

Motion for summary decree: income tax and interest

[1] Following upon my previous Opinion dated 8 August 2006, the Advocate General on behalf of the Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs ("the Revenue") amended the claim against the defender as follows: (1) the income tax sought was reduced from £305,455.63 to £130,422.93; (2) the interest thereon was calculated at £281,652.93. Claims (3) and (4) for surcharges of £14,023.12 and interest thereon of £417.77 were no longer insisted upon. The relevant amended Closed Record is dated March 2007, number 27 of process. There is a typing error at page 8 line 12, where "1995/06" should read "1995/96".

[2] A motion for summary decree in terms of Rule of Court 21.2 has been enrolled. That Rule provides inter alia:

"(1) Subject to paragraphs (2) to (5) of this rule, a pursuer may, at any time after a defender has lodged defences while the action is depending before the court, apply by motion for summary decree against that defender on the ground that there is no defence to the action, or a part of it, disclosed in the defences.

(2) In applying for summary decree, the pursuer may move the court -

(a) to grant decree in terms of all or any of the conclusions of the summons;

(b) to pronounce an interlocutor sustaining or repelling a plea-in-law; or

(c) to dispose of the whole or a part of the subject-matter of the action ...

(4) On a motion under paragraph (1), the court may -

(a) if satisfied that there is no defence to the action disclosed or to any part of it to which the motion relates, grant the motion for summary decree in whole or in part, as the case may be ..."

 

Income tax

[3] As can be seen from paragraphs [6], and [40] to [48] of the previous Opinion, the defender challenged the allocation of payments to account which he had made. In particular, he argued that certain payments to account should have been set against his income tax liability of £305,455.63, reducing that figure, instead of being set against other tax liabilities.

[4] The Revenue responded by allocating the payments to account in the manner contended for by the defender, including an additional payment to account of £85,656.74 made by the defender in October 2006. Precise details of the allocation and its effect upon the principal sum of income tax due are set out in a Schedule prepared by the Revenue, number 6/40 of process. The re-allocation of the payments to account resulted in the reduced figure of income tax due, namely £130,422.93 (the sum first concluded for). In the course of the hearing of the motion for summary decree, counsel for the Revenue explained and vouched both the Schedule and the reduced figure of £130,422.93, referring to supporting productions such as computer printouts, assessments and certificates issued under section 70 of the Taxes Management Act 1970.

 

Interest on unpaid income tax

[5] A cut-off date of 2 October 2006 was chosen in order to facilitate interest calculations. Interest due on outstanding income tax as at 2 October 2006 was demonstrated to amount to £281,652.93 (the sum second concluded for). Again counsel for the Revenue gave a full explanation for that figure, with reference to supporting productions. Interest continues to run on the principal sum of income tax due, namely £130,422.93, from 2 October 2006 until payment, as first concluded for.

 

The Revenue's submissions

[6] Counsel for the Revenue referred to Henderson v 3052775 Nova Scotia, 2006 S.C. (H.L.) 85, particularly paragraphs [13] to [14] and [17] to [19]. In the present case, the defender had no defence which he could advance at proof to the action as now framed. The court should sustain the Revenue's first to fourth pleas-in-law, repel the defender's pleas-in-law, and grant decree in terms of the First and Second Conclusions, with expenses so far as not already dealt with.

 

The defender's response

[7] The defender stated that he did not take exception to the arithmetical calculations. The principal sum due had been reduced from over £305,000 to about £130,000, a decrease of about £175,000. However due to the delay, interest had increased by about £10,000. The defender commented that, had the figures now produced been available two years previously, there might have been no need for the present court hearing.

[8] Nevertheless the defender had two specific points to make.

(i) First, a contested sum of £20,000 was still included in the principal sum, all as set out in the Closed Record dated March 2007. The matter had been discussed at the previous debate: see paragraphs [10], [19], [21], [40], [49], [61] and [72] of the Opinion dated 8 August 2006. Nevertheless the defender again maintained that he could prove that two senior Revenue officers had agreed to reimburse him with £20,000 in costs, as a result of his agreeing to a postponement of a hearing before the General Commissioners.

(ii) Secondly, it was not disputed that £25,000 of the payment to account of £50,000 made in November 1999 had been credited to the defender's wife's account, all as agreed with the Revenue. The defender had in fact written a letter to the Revenue dated 6 September 2006, number 6/29 of process, acknowledging the appropriateness of that attribution. However the sum of £25,000 had not in fact been credited to his wife's account until after 3 March 2005. Prior to 3 March 2005, between the date of payment (24 November 1999) and the date of attribution to his wife's account (3 March 2005), that £25,000 had not been set against the defender's income tax liabilities. Thus the defender had been charged with more interest during the period 24 November 1999 to 3 March 2005 than he should have been had he been credited with the set-off of £25,000 during that period.

[9] The defender referred to Rule of Court 21.2. He submitted that there had clearly been a defence to the action, in that the principal sum sued for had been reduced by £175,000. There was still a defence to the action on the basis of the two points he made, which would have the effect of further reducing the sums sued for. Accordingly the defender opposed the motion for summary decree, and sought time "to prepare defences and a counterclaim". The defender submitted that the granting of summary decree would deny him the opportunity of proving that the sums sought were excessive. The defender further requested that a proof date be fixed.

 

Final reply for the Revenue

[10] Counsel for the Revenue responded by pointing out that the issue of the £20,000 had been decided in paragraph [72] of the previous Opinion dated 8 August 2006. So far as the sum of £25,000 was concerned, the agreement to allocate one-half of the payment of £50,000 to Mrs Montgomery's account was reached at the outset, when the payment of £50,000 was tendered. In fact, the payment of £50,000 had resulted in the Revenue's receiving £25,000 for the defender's wife's account before her tax liability crystallised. In effect therefore, the Revenue had received a pre-payment in respect of her tax liability. On the basis of the defender's instructions at the time when the sum of £50,000 was paid, only £25,000 could be ascribed to his account. There had been no basis upon which the full £50,000 could be ascribed to the defender's account.

[11] Counsel further submitted that, in any event, the defender had no appropriate averments permitting him to address this issue. The defender had amended the Record on many previous occasions, for example, during the course of the previous debate, all as noted in paragraphs [35] to [38] of the Opinion dated 8 August 2006. The defender had also amended on other occasions. In February 2007, he had foregone an opportunity to amend. The defender had sought to delay proceedings in the past. His motion to amend at this late stage was a further attempt to delay matters.

 

Discussion

Further amendment by the defender

[12] The defender's motion seeking time to prepare defences and a counterclaim has to be treated as a motion to amend his present pleadings. Late amendment is a matter for the discretion of the court. The interlocutors in the present case reveal that the defender amended the pleadings on 10 February 2006 and 27 April 2006 (the latter amendment taking place in the course of a debate). On 16 January 2007, a diet of proof was discharged on the defender's motion, and I appointed the cause to be put out By Order on 20 February 2007 for consideration of a Minute of Amendment which the defender proposed to lodge within four weeks (i.e. by 13 February 2007). No such Minute of Amendment was lodged. On 20 February 2007 I appointed the Revenue to lodge in process "a chronological statement of account detailing when the defender's tax obligations arose, how interest on those obligations had accrued, any adjustments that have been made to those obligations and any periods in which interest was offset by said adjustments". That statement was to be lodged in process and to be intimated to the defender by 6 March 2007. The Schedule number 6/40 was duly lodged and intimated. The pleadings described the Schedule as "setting out in chronological order by tax year the tax charged, the allocation of payments made and the effect of those payments on interest accrued" (Article 2 of Condescendence, page 8). That is what the Schedule did indeed do. Furthermore, on 6 March 2007 revised statements of interest were sent to the defender (Article 3 of Condescendence, page 13). The motion for summary decree was not heard until 27 April 2007. There was accordingly ample time for the defender to consider the Schedule and the revised statements of interest prior to the hearing. The defender gave no good reason for seeking to amend his pleadings further at such a late stage in the proceedings.

[13] Against that background I have decided in my discretion that the defender should not be permitted to amend his pleadings further at this late stage. I accordingly refuse what was in effect a motion to amend.

 

Whether there is a defence to the action disclosed in the defences

(a) The sum first concluded for: income tax

[14] As can be seen from my previous Opinion dated 8 August 2006, the defender challenged the allocation of payments to account and thus the principal sum due in respect of income tax. The Revenue responded by re-allocating payments to account in the manner contended for by the defender. The defender also challenged surcharges of £14,023.12 and interest thereon of £417.77. The Revenue no longer insist upon recovering those sums. The defender further contended that there was an agreement that he should be reimbursed to the extent of £20,000 following upon an abortive hearing before the General Commissioners. I have given my view on that matter in paragraph [72] of my previous Opinion, namely that the defender's averments in relation to that matter are irrelevant. Finally, while the defender had a submission to make about the effect on interest accruing of his payment to account of £50,000 made in November 1999, the defender did not dispute the fact that only £25,000 of that payment was to be used to reduce the principal sum of income tax owed by him: the remaining £25,000 was to be used to reduce his wife's tax liability, as acknowledged in his letter to the Revenue dated 6 September 2006, number 6/29 of process. It should also be noted that during the hearing of the motion for summary decree, counsel for the Revenue carefully explained the Schedule number 6/40 of process, and justified every figure leading to the total sum of £130,422.93 sought in the First Conclusion of the Summons by reference to productions including computer printouts, assessments and certificates.

[15] Having considered all the matters outlined in the preceding paragraph, the pleadings, the productions, and the submissions, I am of the view that the defences do not disclose a defence to the Revenue's claim for £130,422.93 with interest as first concluded for in the Summons as amended: cf. Rule of Court 21.2, cit. sup. Thus in relation to the principal sum of income tax and interest thereon from 2 October 2006 sought in the First Conclusion, the defender is, in my view, "bound to fail", and "there is nothing of relevance to be decided in a proof": cf. dicta in Henderson v 3052775 Nova Scotia Ltd, 2006 SC (HL) 85, at paragraph [19]. I shall therefore grant summary decree in terms of the First Conclusion.

(b) The sum second concluded for: interest on unpaid income tax

As Lord Rodger of Earlsferry said in Henderson v 3052775 Nova Scotia Ltd, cit. sup., at paragraph [19]:

"In our view ... a judge who is considering a motion for summary decree is entitled to proceed not merely on what is said in the defences, but on the basis of any facts which can be clarified, from documents, articles and affidavits, without trespassing on the role of the proof judge in resolving factual disputes after hearing evidence. The judge can grant summary decree if he is satisfied, first, that there is no issue raised by the defender which can be properly resolved only at proof and, secondly, that, on the facts which have been clarified in this way, the defender has no defence to all, or any part, of the action. In other words, before he grants summary decree, the judge has to be satisfied that, even if the defender succeeds in proving the substance of his defence as it has been clarified, his case must fail ..."

[16] In the context of interest accruing on unpaid income tax, the defender drew attention to the fact that £25,000 from the payment to account of £50,000 made on 24 November 1999 had not in fact been allocated to his wife's account until after 3 March 2005. Yet he had not been given credit for the full £50,000 when calculating interest for the period from 24 November 1999 until 3 March 2005. Thus he had been charged with more interest during that period than he should have been.

[17] The Revenue's response at the bar is noted in paragraph [10] above, namely that the £50,000 was tendered at the outset in 1999 on the basis that one-half thereof would be allocated to the defender's liability and one-half would be allocated to the defender's wife's account. Mrs Montgomery's liability did not in fact crystallise until a later date, and thus there was in effect a pre-payment to the Revenue made on her account. On the defender's instructions in 1999, there was no basis upon which the full £50,000 could be attributed to his tax liability.

[18] However the Revenue's averments in Article 2, page 8, are as follows:

"That particular allocation [namely the allocation of £25,000 at the defender's request to the tax liabilities of his spouse] was requested at a meeting attended by the defender, his accountant, and officers of Revenue and Customs on 3 March 2005, and confirmed by the defender in writing by a letter dated 6 September 2006."

Those averments do not suggest that it had been understood at the outset (when the payment of £50,000 was made in November 1999) that one-half of that payment was to be allocated to the defender's wife's account. On the contrary, the averments state that the request for the allocation to the wife's account was made at a meeting on 3 March 2005. If those averments accurately reflect the sequence of events, it is at least arguable that the defender may be entitled to have the full payment of £50,000 taken into account when calculating the interest accruing during the period 24 November 1999 to 3 March 2005, as the Revenue had the use of the £50,000 during that period. Thus while the defender cannot (and does not) claim that the whole £50,000 should be deducted from the principal sum of income tax due, he does contend that the interest calculated for the period 24 November 1999 to 3 March 2005 is overstated.

[19] It is true that the Schedule number 6/40 of process uses the figure of £25,000 when taking into account (for the purposes of calculating interest) the payment to account made to the Revenue in November 1999. Moreover the Revenue expressly avers in Article 2 of Condescendence, page 8:

"With reference to the defender's averments in answer, admitted that payments totalling £137,882.76 have been made by the defender, in the amounts and at or about the times stated, under explanation that said payments have been wholly taken into account in calculating the sum first concluded for, their allocation against the defender's tax liabilities for the years 1988/89 to 1995/96 having been made by way of concession in view of the defender's averment on record and assertion at the bar that the payments fall to be ascribed to those liabilities and the sum formerly first concluded for reduced accordingly, save for one half of the payment of £50,000 made on 24 November 1999 which was and remains allocated at the defender's request to the tax liabilities of the defender's spouse [italics added]."

Accordingly the Schedule, the pleadings, and the supporting productions, suggest that, when assessing the interest accruing on the income tax due by the defender during the period 24 November 1999 to 3 March 2005, the Revenue adopted the approach of treating the payment made on 24 November 1999 as amounting only to £25,000.

[20] In those circumstances, I am not satisfied that the defender has no defence in respect of the interest sought in the Second Conclusion. It seems to me, on the Revenue's own averments in Article 2 of Condescendence, page 8 of the Record, that there is some force in the defender's contention that, when calculating interest on unpaid tax, he should be given credit for the full £50,000 payment during the period from 24 November 1999 until the request for ascription to his wife's account was made at the meeting on 3 March 2005, particularly where, as stated by counsel for the Revenue, Mrs Montgomery's tax liability had not crystallised by November 1999. If the defender were to be given such credit, the calculations and the total figure in relation to interest may be different.

[21] In the result, I shall refuse in hoc statu to grant summary decree in terms of the Second Conclusion.

 

Decision
[22]
For the reasons given above, I shall, in terms of Rule of Court 21.2(1) and (4)(a), sustain the Revenue's first to third pleas-in-law only to the extent of granting summary decree for payment of the sum of £130,422.93 with interest all in terms of the First Conclusion of the Summons as further amended and as contained in the Closed Record dated March 2007. I refuse in hoc statu the Revenue's motion for summary decree in terms of the Second Conclusion as amended. I reserve meantime the question of expenses. I shall put the case out By Order to enable parties to address me on matters such as expenses and further procedure.


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