[2011] UKFTT 674 (TC)
TC01516
Appeal numbers: TC/2010/09208
TC/2010/09269
TC/2011/03667
TC/2011/03668
Income
Tax – Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 – application by Appellants to stay
proceedings in appeals against assessments and penalty determinations on grounds
of lack of resources due to subjection of their properties to civil recovery
proceedings – held, availability of resources not relevant to issues to be
determined in substantive hearing or to ability to pursue appeals – issues in
civil recovery proceedings and present appeals different and so possible overlap
of evidence no reason to stay proceedings – application refused
FIRST-TIER TRIBUNAL
TAX
MAXINE
ELLEN PERIES First Appellant
ANSELM
PERIES Second Appellant
-
and -
THE SERIOUS
ORGANISED CRIME AGENCY Respondent
TRIBUNAL: JOHN CLARK (TRIBUNAL JUDGE)
Sitting in public at 45 Bedford Square, London WC1 on 3 October 2011
Timothy Peun of Morgan Rose,
Solicitors, for the First and Second Appellants
Nicholas Chapman of Counsel
for the Respondent
© CROWN COPYRIGHT
2011
DECISION: REASONS FOR DIRECTIONS
1. At
the hearing on 3 October 2011, the parties requested that my reasons for whatever
decision might be taken following the hearing should be set out in a full
reasoned decision. In separate Directions, I have directed that the application
by the First and Second Appellants (“the Appellants”) to vacate that hearing is
refused, and that the application by the Appellants to stay the above numbered
appeals against tax assessments and penalty determinations pending the outcome
of any alternative proceedings, namely the civil recovery proceedings under
POCA No 11065 of 2009, Claim No CO/11064/2009, or any applications either
contemplated or pending therein, is refused. I have also given various case
management directions, which do not need to be considered in this decision.
2. Pursuant
to s 317 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (“POCA 2002”), on 9 November 2010
the Respondent raised assessments to tax in an aggregate sum of £305,355.43 (plus
interest due on late payment) in relation to the First Appellant and in an
aggregate sum of £327,830.65 (plus interest due on late payment) in relation to
the Second Appellant. By Notices of Appeal dated 7 December 2010 the First and
Second Appellants respectively appealed against those assessments.
3. On
13 April 2011 the Respondent raised penalty determinations totalling
£122,142.16 against the First Appellant and £147,168.26 against the Second
Appellant. On 9 May 2011 the Appellants appealed against those penalty
determinations.
4. At
the hearing I informed the parties that I was aware as a result of another
appeal, namely that of Blue Sphere Global Ltd ((2008) VAT Decision
20901), of evidence relating to the activities of the First Appellant while she
was working for a company named Xicom Ltd. I offered to pass the case to
another Judge if any of the parties did not wish me to be involved in
considering the present appeals. As none of the parties objected to my
involvement, I continued with the hearing.
5. Confiscation
proceedings had been brought against the Second Appellant (who is also known as
Anslem Peries) following conviction on certain charges. These proceedings were
stayed because the Second Appellant’s legal aid did not provide sufficient
funding to pay for necessary representation.
6. The
Metropolitan Police referred the matter to the Respondent, which commenced a
civil recovery investigation under Part 8 POCA 2002 in respect of both
Appellants.
7. In
November 2008, on application by the Respondent, the High Court made a
disclosure order against both Appellants. Those orders were granted on the
basis (inter alia) that there were reasonable grounds for suspecting that property
held by the Appellants had been obtained through unlawful conduct. The unlawful
conduct alleged was summarised before me by the Respondent as involvement in
MTIC fraud and/or the laundering of the proceeds of MTIC fraud.
8. Thereafter,
in October 2009, the High Court made a property freezing order under s 245 POCA
2002 against each of the Appellants. These orders were made on the basis (inter
alia) that there was a good arguable case that property held by the Appellants
had been obtained through unlawful conduct; before me, the Respondent referred
to such conduct as MTIC fraud and/or the laundering of the proceeds of MTIC
fraud.
9. Subject
to certain difficulties encountered by the Appellants, described below, the
civil recovery proceedings are continuing.
Whether the 3 October 2011 directions hearing should be vacated
10. The Appellants’
solicitors had indicated on 14 September 2011 that they intended to file an
application in the High Court for a legal costs exclusion to the freezing order
over the property of the Appellants, that in the absence of funds, counsel
could not be briefed to appear at the directions hearing relating to these
appeals, and asked for the Respondent’s consent to vacate the directions
hearing. The Respondent did not consent. For various reasons the Respondent did
not accept that the Appellants were unable to fund the proceedings in these
appeals. The application for the legal costs exclusion had not been made, and
there was no indication when it would be made. The Respondent referred to
various other issues, and did not consider that an indefinite postponement of
the directions hearing was appropriate.
11. Although the
Appellants were unable to brief counsel to appear at the directions hearing,
they were represented by their solicitors. Mr Peun did not seek to argue at the
hearing that it should not proceed.
Whether the appeals should be stayed
Arguments for the Appellants
12. Mr Peun referred
to the “overriding objective” in Rule 2(1) of the Tribunal Rules, and to the
factors set out at Rule 2(2)(a)-(e). Both 2(2)(a) and (b) were relevant. The
Appellants contended, although the Respondent now indicated that it did not
accept this contention, that as the only assets of value belonging to the
Appellants were subject to the freezing order and were already being claimed by
the Respondent, the assessments to tax would have no prospect of realising any benefit
for the Respondent (or for the general body of taxpayers) if the Respondent was
successful in the civil recovery proceedings.
13. In relation to
the question of complexity, in his submission it was clear that the cases were
substantially complex, requiring detailed consideration of a large number of
bank account transactions. In respect of costs, these were likely to be
prohibitive because of the length of time since the transactions occurred, the
need to retain accountants to advise, and the need to review previous evidence
in criminal proceedings brought against the Second Appellant.
14. The Appellants
had no resources to pay for the tax and penalty appeals or the civil recovery
proceedings; the only assets that they had which could fund the tax and penalty
appeals were the three real properties that had been frozen under the 2009
order. The Appellants were seeking the legal costs exclusion, and the
Respondent was now suggesting that in relation to the civil recovery
proceedings they were in contempt of court because of a pre-existing loan taken
out by the Second Appellant. The Appellants owed their present legal advisers a
substantial sum of money both in respect of the work relating to the civil
recovery proceedings and the present appeals.
15. Mr Peun
submitted that there was a clear and substantial inequality of arms as between
the Appellants and the Respondent.
16. The Respondent
had indicated that the appeals would have to be determined, regardless of the
outcome of the High Court proceedings. If this was correct, Mr Peun submitted
that a stay was likely to shorten the tax and penalty appeals (in the event
that the Respondent was unsuccessful in the civil recovery proceedings), or could
even obviate completely the need for the tax and penalty appeal proceedings
(should the Respondent be successful in the civil recovery proceedings). Mr
Peun could see no direct prejudice in allowing the Appellants to consider one
case first.
17. It was not
prudent to have two sets of proceedings in different forums involving the same
evidence, and findings of fact. The properties had been the subject of a
detailed tracing exercise, and the Respondent was also claiming their value in
these proceedings. Either the amounts were proceeds of crime, or they were
income, and taxable. It would be illogical to have conflicting findings as
between the civil recovery proceedings and the tax and penalty appeals, based
on the same facts.
18. The Respondent
was relying to a significant extent in the present appeals on the Appellants’
witness statement evidence obtained in the context of the civil recovery
proceedings. Mr Peun argued that under the Civil Procedure Rules (“CPR”) part
32.12, it was not open to the Respondent to use that evidence in the tax and
penalty appeals without the permission of the witness, the permission of the
High Court for some other use, or the witness statement having been put in
evidence at a hearing heard in public. This issue could be resolved by a stay
in the proceedings in the tax and penalty appeals.
19. He referred to Khan
v Director of Assets Recovery Agency (SPC 00523), [2006] STC (SCD) 154, Swallow
v Revenue and Customs Commissioners [2010] UKFTT 481 (TC), (TC/2010/00742),
and Global Active Holdings (2006) VAT Decision 19715.
20. In reply to Mr
Chapman’s submissions, Mr Peun stated that the Appellants were not arguing that
the appeals should be vacated or conceded by the Respondent. If the Respondent
were to win in the High Court, the Respondent could pursue the assessments
against the Appellants, although Mr Peun could not see the point of doing so.
If the respective proceedings were run in parallel, they concerned the same
subject matter.
21. The Respondent
had referred to monies not being taxable because they represented the proceeds
of crime, yet (for example) an additional sum had been referred to in the
Respondent’s Statement of Case as having been assessed on the Second Appellant
because he used various receipts originating from one company to finance his
purchase of a property. In the civil recovery proceedings the Respondent was
contending that the Appellants had the benefit of monies which were the
proceeds of crime. If the Respondent was arguing this, the Appellants would
meet the case. If such monies were proceeds of crime, they could not also be
treated as income for the purposes of the tax assessments.
22. At the time of
the letters notifying the assessments, the Respondent had not particularised
what basis it had to assume revenue powers, or what the basis of the
assessments was. Once it had become clear what the Respondent was assessing,
the Appellants had reserved the right to amend their grounds of appeal once the
full legal and factual basis for the Respondent’s respective decisions was more
clearly stated, and following the disclosure and review of the documents upon
which the Respondent intended to rely.
23. It had since
become apparent that the Respondent was arguing that everything deposited was
income. This involved six years’ bank statements. The information as to the
Respondent’s contentions had not been available to the Appellants in the
decision letters, or until May 2011 when the Respondent’s Statement of Case had
been served; even now, the position was not fully clear.
24. There was a need
for the Appellants to go through six years of records. They had not had the
finances to instruct an accountant. Mr Peun submitted that the Respondent was
making too much of a discrepancy. The Appellants had had to take a pragmatic
approach in circumstances where it had not been clear at first what needed to
be done.
25. The Appellants
were not submitting that they wanted the appeals conceded, merely a stay. If
the civil recovery proceedings went ahead, there were no other assets available
apart from a loan agreement. Mr Peun emphasised that there was no evidence of
the existence of other assets, only a loan. He referred to the history of the
enquiries, and submitted that it ill behoved the Respondent to say that there
was no evidence as to the absence of other assets. The loan had been taken out
before the property freezing order. This was because of the difficulty of
obtaining any income from anywhere else.
26. From April 2011
onwards, the Respondent had known that the two Appellants had no assets with
which to fund the civil recovery proceedings or the Tribunal proceedings. Mr
Peun submitted that this should be a factor in deciding whether the Tribunal
proceedings should be stayed.
27. The whole
purpose of the correspondence between the solicitors had been to try to reduce
costs and ensure that the Tribunal and the High Court did not make conflicting
findings. Money was being claimed on two alternative bases. Here there were two
different jurisdictions involved in determining the treatment of the same
money; Mr Peun submitted that this did not appear logical.
28. There had been
talk of concealment, involving an allegation that the Appellants had not
declared their taxable income. It was accepted that the Appellants’ tax affairs
were not up to date, but they were not concealing their income.
29. In relation to
CPR 32.12 and the legislation cited by Mr Chapman (see below), it appeared that
the legislation was not to oust the High Court. It appeared to relate to the
Respondent’s internal operations. The hearing in June 2011 had not been a
public hearing, so the point made for the Respondent against the Appellants’
submissions on the CPR did not engage. Mr Peun submitted that it would be
illogical for the Tribunal to have overriding jurisdiction to set aside part of
the CPR. The position remained that the evidence given in the High Court
proceedings was not admissible. The Appellants were not arguing that the
Respondent could not assess; they accepted that they were appealing against
assessments. It was open to the Appellants to challenge the basis for the
Respondent making the assessment, namely the criteria for assuming the powers
of Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (“HMRC”).
30. The tax
assessments had not been made until a year after the commencement of the civil
recovery proceedings. They could have been made once the witness statements had
been served. It was therefore “hollow” for the Respondent to argue that timely
prosecution of the tax and penalty appeals was required. [Mr Chapman intervened
to refer to the Appellants’ failure to co-operate.] The appeals had progressed
on the basis of what had been presented to the Appellants. The decision letters
had been issued in November 2010, covering a period of six tax years, the
latest being six years earlier. It was therefore not fair to say that the
appellants could have done more to pursue their appeals. Mr Peun suggested that
there was no prejudice to the Respondent in delaying the tax proceedings.
However, there was prejudice to the Appellants in having to pursue them at the
present stage. It was likely that the High Court proceedings would determine
the income issue.
31. The application
was emphatically not a tactical device, as the Respondent was arguing. The
Appellants had informed the Respondent about the matter in May 2011. It was
desirable for the tax proceedings to be stayed, to allow consideration of the
issues. The determination as to the treatment of the money would be made by the
High Court.
Arguments for the Respondent
32. Mr Chapman
submitted that it was wrong to suggest that the Respondent had brought claims
in respect of the tax liabilities; these were appeals made by the Appellants
against assessments and penalty determinations. The assessments would stand
unless the Appellants could show reason for their amendment or discharge.
33. The Appellants’
application amounted to a tactical device to enable them to avoid the
difficulty of serving evidence and explaining their position. In the High Court
civil recovery proceedings the Appellants had each stated:
“It is correct that I am not up to date with my
declarations for tax. The fact that my declared income to Revenue and Customs
is not consistent with my actual income and capital is therefore no indication
that my income and capital are unlawfully derived.”
In stark contrast, in their respective grounds of appeal
against the assessments and penalties, the Appellants contended:
“The assessments for tax pursuant to s 18 Schedule D
ICTA 1988 (Case 1) are not correct in that the sums on which SOCA have assessed
the Appellant are not ‘annual profits or gains . . . from any trade
profession or vocation’ within the meaning of s 18 Schedule D ICTA 1988
(Case 1).”
34. If the tax
appeal proceedings were stayed, the Appellants could remain silent. The
Respondent had no idea what the Appellants were saying about their income.
35. Mr Peun had said
that it would be prejudicial for both sets of proceedings to continue at the
same time. However, this was not the case where statements were inconsistent.
Mr Chapman referred to s 32 of the Serious and Organised Crime and Police Act
2005, which stated:
“Information used by SOCA in connection with the
exercise of any of its functions may be used by SOCA in connection with the
exercise of any of its other functions.”
The Civil Procedure Rules did not trump statutory
proceedings. In any event, the witness statement had been put in evidence in
June 2011, which therefore excluded the application of the Civil Procedure
Rules. Under the Tribunal’s own Rules, the Tribunal could hear any evidence,
whether or not it would be admissible in other proceedings. It was therefore
not necessary for the Respondent to make any application to the High Court. Mr
Chapman suggested that the Appellants were trying to avoid the inevitable,
namely to state what their case was.
36. The Appellants
had argued that there were three reasons justifying a stay. The first was that
they only had the three properties, and if the civil recovery proceedings were
successful, they would have nothing to pay the tax liabilities. The Respondent
considered that this was totally irrelevant. The Appellants had appealed
against the assessments and penalty determinations; it was for them to show
good reason why they should not be assessed. The question of payment was
irrelevant to the proceedings. Further, the Respondent did not accept that the
Appellants had no other assets; they had received significant sums in their
bank accounts, and over £80,000 in cash over three years. There was no reason
for the Respondent not to defend the assessments and determinations and
thereafter seek recovery of the debts.
37. The second
reason had been the close evidential matrix. The Respondent accepted that there
would be an evidential overlap. The question was not whether the cases involved
consideration of the same evidence, but rather whether they involved
consideration of the same issues. Mr Chapman submitted that the issues were
different. In the civil recovery proceedings, the question for the High Court
would be whether it was satisfied that the property which was the subject of
the claim was or represented the proceeds of crime. In the tax and penalty appeals,
the issue for the Tribunal would be whether the Appellants had overcome the
burden on them to show that the assessments and/or the penalty determinations
were wrong; the only real factual issue would be whether the Appellants’
incomes were taxable. As this was a completely different issue to the one
before the High Court, it provided no basis for staying these proceedings
behind those in the High Court.
38. On the third
reason, costs, an absence of funding did not amount to a good basis for
delaying proceedings. Mr Chapman referred to Khan at paragraphs 22 and
30. Here the Appellants were able to be present, to give evidence and to
conduct proceedings (in person, if necessary). Inability to pay their
representatives could not amount to a good reason to excuse them from
prosecuting their appeals. Further, the Respondent did not accept that the
Appellants were unable to fund their appeals.
39. The Respondent
could not understand how the proposed stay could assist, in any event. If the
Appellants made a legal costs application to the High Court and that
application was successful, the Appellants would be able to fund both sets of
proceedings, and there would thus be no difficulty. If such an application were
not made, or if it were unsuccessful, the Appellants would be unable in any
lawful manner to fund either set of proceedings, and the stay would achieve
nothing. If the civil recovery proceedings were to be successful, the
Appellants would appear (on the basis on which they were arguing their case) to
have no mechanism of then funding the present tax and penalty appeals. It
followed that the only possible chain of events in which a stay could assist
was if the High Court were to reject the Appellants’ application for a legal
costs exclusion but were then to go on and find for the Appellants in the civil
recovery proceedings. In the Respondent’s submission, the likelihood of this
chain of events was remote, and the Tribunal should not stay the proceedings on
that basis.
40. The Appellants
had referred to the overriding objective. This required the Tribunal to weigh
the competing interests of both parties. The proposed stay would be prejudicial
to the Respondent for various reasons:
(1)
The stay would have the effect of restraining the Respondent from
collecting unpaid tax and national insurance for which the Appellants had been
assessed, and the penalties thereon. These sums remained owing. Interest
continued to accumulate on a daily basis. The Respondent was entitled to expect
the Appellants to settle their debt promptly or to prosecute their appeals
timeously. The following reason was also relevant to this one.
(2)
The Appellants had advanced no cogent reason to explain why their
appeals had any merit whatever, in particular why the assessments and penalties
were wrong. Mr Chapman referred to the witness statements served in the High
Court proceedings.
(3)
There was a turnover of HMRC officers seconded to the Respondent for the
purposes of adopted revenue functions. The longer the appeals took before being
prosecuted by the Appellants, the more officers would be required to take over
conduct of the case, with obvious resource implications.
(4)
The longer the appeals took before being determined, the greater the
legal costs associated with them.
41. The Tribunal
itself had an interest in ensuring that matters before it were litigated
efficiently and timeously so that its own resources were effectively managed
and its process was not abused.
42. By the
Appellants’ own admissions, it was clear that both received incomes through
their employment and/or self-employment and that they did not pay tax thereon.
Mr Chapman submitted that the only issue before the Tribunal in these appeals
would be as to quantum of the debt. The Appellants had asserted in their
Grounds of Appeal that their incomes were not taxable; this assertion was
wholly unparticularised and was totally inconsistent with their assertions to
the High Court. The Appellants had failed to serve evidence or to set out in
their Grounds of Appeal any contention that the assessments and penalties were
excessive nor, consequently, any basis for such a contention. The overriding
objective referred to the avoidance of delay. If quantum was to be in issue, there
was no reason why this narrow and comparatively straightforward issue could not
be litigated before the Tribunal without delay. Mr Chapman referred to the
civil limb of Article 6 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human
Rights and Fundamental Freedoms.
43. Mr Chapman
referred again to the inconsistency between the Appellants’ statements in the
High Court proceedings and their apparent case in the tax proceedings. In the
Respondent’s view, the application for the stay amounted to a tactical device; it
would be to the Appellants’ advantage if they were not required to
particularise their case and serve evidence in respect of these appeals, as this
would almost certainly damage their case in the civil recovery proceedings
and/or render the tax and penalty appeals wholly unarguable.
44. He referred to
the separate question whether it would be onerous for the Respondent to oppose
the tax and penalty appeals if the civil recovery proceedings were successful.
The Appellants had suggested that if the civil recovery proceedings were
successful, they would have no remaining assets and so it would be oppressive
of the Respondent not to concede the tax and penalty appeals. The assertion had
not been further particularised. In the Respondent’s submission, it was as a
matter of principle misconceived. If the Appellants owed tax (as they appeared
to have accepted in their High Court witness statements), it was not
appropriate for them to suggest that the Respondents should concede the appeals
that they as Appellants had made. In any event, the Respondent was entitled to,
and would continue to, oppose the tax and penalty appeals and enforce the debt
that the Appellants owed to the revenue. Further, the Respondent did not accept
as a matter of fact that all of the Appellants’ assets were frozen, nor,
therefore, that they would have no assets left if the civil recovery
proceedings were to be successful.
45. In a response to
Mr Peun’s reply, Mr Chapman referred to the loans as being from companies which
had had involvement in MTIC-related activities. Over a period of three years
£90,000 had been drawn, a party involved being the Second Appellant’s brother,
a convicted MTIC fraudster.
46. Mr Chapman
emphasised that the first limb of the Appellants’ argument was based on a
misconception of law. It was wrong to say that proceeds of crime were not in
law taxable income. It followed that the High Court’s findings would not
resolve the issue for the Tribunal, and the Tribunal’s findings would not
resolve the issue for the High Court. With reference to Khan, the
fundamental question was whether there would be any problem if the proceedings
in these appeals took place before the High Court proceedings; the firm answer
was that there would not be any such problem.
Discussion and conclusions
47. In considering
this application, it is not appropriate for me to consider questions of fact
that are more relevant to the decisions to be taken in a substantive hearing. A
detailed witness statement was provided by Mr Gerald O’Mahoney, a partner in
the firm of solicitors advising the Appellants. This statement has assisted in
providing background information, but in the absence of any evidence from the
Respondent or any cross-examination of the witness, neither of which would have
been appropriate steps to take at this stage in the proceedings, I am not in a
position to give the statement (or any particular part of it) any significant weight
in the process of deciding on the Appellants’ application for a stay of the tax
proceedings.
48. On the
Appellants’ first reason justifying a stay, I accept Mr Chapman’s submission at
paragraph 36 above. The nature of the proceedings in this Tribunal is that they
are appeals against the assessments (and the associated penalty
determinations). As confirmed by the Special Commissioners in Khan, the
questions which can be considered by the Tribunal under s 50(6) of the Taxes Management
Act 1970 (“TMA 1970”) on an appeal against an assessment fall into two
categories. The first is whether “. . . the appellant is overcharged by an
assessment other than a self-assessment”. Under that sub-section, if on appeal
the Tribunal decides that the appellant is not so overcharged, the assessment
is to stand good. The burden of proof on that issue is therefore on the
appellant in such an appeal. The other category of question which Khan
shows to be within the Tribunal’s jurisdiction is any issues concerning the
validity of the assessment; see Khan at paragraphs 15 to 17. Again,
these are matters on which the appellant in such proceedings must satisfy the
Tribunal.
49. Neither category
of question is affected by or concerned with the ability or otherwise of an
appellant to pay the tax assessed (and any associated penalties determined).
These Tribunals, and those which they have replaced, have never been concerned
with the question of recoverability by the revenue authorities of tax assessed
on appellants, but simply with such issues as appropriateness of assessments,
their validity, and their quantum.
50. Whether or not
the Appellants in the present case have funds available beyond those
represented by the property assets (net of liabilities) is a matter for the
civil recovery proceedings in the High Court. In the context of an application
for a stay of these tax and penalty appeals, it is not appropriate for me to
consider their ultimate ability or inability to pay the tax and penalties if
the eventual substantive hearing of these appeals determines that the
assessments and penalty determinations made in respect of them by the
Respondent are to be confirmed.
51. On the second
ground, the close evidential matrix as between the evidence relating to the
civil recovery proceedings and that relating to the present appeals, I agree
with Mr Chapman’s submission at paragraph 37 above that the issues in the respective
proceedings are different. I therefore also agree that the similarity of the
evidence which may be considered by, respectively, the High Court and these
Tribunals does not amount to a justification for a stay of the tax and penalty
appeals. Whether there is some form of overlap between the amounts sought by
the Respondent in the civil recovery proceedings and the tax assessments and
penalty determinations against which the Appellants have appealed to the
Tribunal, is a matter which will have to be considered in the civil recovery
proceedings and not by the Tribunal.
52. In arriving at
this conclusion, I am satisfied that there is a clear distinction between the
present case and Swallow. That case involved an application by HMRC for
a stay of proceedings for six months to permit them to continue a criminal
investigation into circumstances surrounding the marketing of a tax avoidance
scheme. The present appeals are not in my view affected by the state of
progress of the civil recovery proceedings, as the latter concern the separate
question whether the property subject to the civil recovery claim is, or
represents, the proceeds of crime.
53. In the same way,
the issue in Global Active Holdings was whether there should be a stay
pending criminal proceedings against the shareholders and directors of the two
companies involved. The Tribunal held that there was a risk of prejudice to a
criminal trial if certain findings were to be made in the Tribunal appeal, and
therefore granted a stay of nine months or, if earlier, until the conclusion of
the criminal proceedings. For the reasons given in the preceding paragraph, I
consider the issue in Global Active Holdings to be clearly distinct from
that arising in respect of the present appeals.
54. The Appellants’
third ground for seeking a stay was that of costs. I do not consider that the
cost of the proceedings is a matter for the Tribunal’s consideration, except in
determining whether, in cases where there is power to award costs, such an
award should be made to a party. In the latter context, I note that these cases
have been allocated to the Complex category, and I am not aware of any request
by the Appellants under Rule 10(1)(c)(ii) of the Tribunal Rules for exclusion
of the proceedings from liability for costs under Rule 10(1)(c).
55. I accept Mr
Chapman’s submission at paragraph 38 above that the absence of funding does not
amount to an appropriate basis for delaying the progress of proceedings in
these tax and penalty appeals. In these Tribunals, a certain proportion of
appeals are conducted by appellants in person. It is thus open to the
Appellants to pursue their appeals by some means or other, whether or not it
would be preferable for them to be professionally represented. Their position
is not like that of the appellant in Khan, as there appears to be no
reason to prevent them from attending the substantive hearing and, if necessary,
putting their case as appellants in person. For the reasons I have already
stated, I am not able to make any findings as to the Appellants’ financial
position, and in any event this is not a matter which I would be able to take
into account.
56. On the question
of the apparent inconsistency between the witness statements made for the
purposes of the civil recovery proceedings and the basis for the appeals
against the assessments and penalty determinations, I do not consider it
necessary to take such factual issues into account in determining whether or
not a stay of these proceedings is appropriate. Whether it will be necessary or
desirable for those witness statements to be included as part of the evidence
before the Tribunal for the substantive hearing of these appeals is a matter
which will require to be determined in due course, having regard to the nature
of the appeals as considered above and the consequent burden of proof falling
on the Appellants.
57. Having weighed
the respective arguments put by both parties, I consider that the overriding
objective will best be served by refusing the Appellants’ application for a
stay of proceedings and allowing the appeals to progress in the normal way,
irrespective of what may or may not happen in respect of the civil recovery
proceedings in the High Court. I therefore refuse the application and have made
other directions relating to the future progress of the appeals. I make no
order as to costs in respect of the application, and accordingly leave these to
be considered once the appeals have been determined.
Right to apply for permission to appeal
58. This document
contains full findings of fact and reasons for the decision. Any party
dissatisfied with this decision has a right to apply for permission to appeal
against it pursuant to Rule 39 of the Tribunal Procedure (First-tier Tribunal)
(Tax Chamber) Rules 2009. The application must be received by this Tribunal
not later than 56 days after this decision is sent to that party. The parties
are referred to “Guidance to accompany a Decision from the First-tier Tribunal
(Tax Chamber)” which accompanies and forms part of this decision notice.
JOHN CLARK
TRIBUNAL JUDGE
RELEASE DATE: 20 October 2011