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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals (Excise) Decisions >> Darwesh v Revenue & Customs [2009] UKVAT(Excise) E01171 (11 March 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/Excise/2009/E01171.html Cite as: [2009] UKVAT(Excise) E1171, [2009] UKVAT(Excise) E01171 |
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E01171
Excise – seizure of tobacco and alcohol – goods packed in luggage without taxpayer's knowledge – condemnation proceedings determined in taxpayer's absence – whether decision not to restore the goods reasonable – yes – appeal dismissed
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE
S DARWESH Appellant
- and -
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S
REVENUE AND CUSTOMS Respondents
Tribunal: Malcolm Gammie CBE QC (Chairman)
S K Das
Sitting in public in London on 24th September 2008
The Appellant appeared in person
Robert Jones (Counsel) instructed by the Acting Solicitor for HM Revenue and Customs, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2009
DECISION
The Facts
Officer: "What do you have to declare?"
Darwesh: "I have some alcohol."
Mr Darwesh showed the Officer two bags containing 5 litre bottles of spirits.
Officer: "Anything else?"
Darwesh: "No."
Officer: "Is this all your luggage?"
Darwesh: "Yes."
Officer: "Did you pack the bags yourself?"
Darwesh: "Yes."
Officer: "Has anybody given you anything to carry?"
Darwesh: "No."
Officer: "Do you have any more cigarettes"
Darwesh: "Yes, I have six cartons."
Officer: "Why did you not declare them to me?"
Darwesh: "I am declaring them to you."
The Appeals and the Review
The Law
"Any person entering the United Kingdom shall, at such place and in such manner as the Commissioners may direct, declare any thing contained in his baggage or carried with him which-
(a) he has obtained outside the United Kingdom; or
(b) being dutiable goods (, he has obtained in the United Kingdom without payment of duty or tax,
And in respect of which he is not entitled to exemption from duty and tax by virtue of any order under section 13 of the Customs and Excise Duties (General Reliefs) Act 1979 (personal reliefs)."
"Anything chargeable with any duty or tax which is found concealed, or is not declared, and anything which is being taken into or out of the United Kingdom contrary to any prohibition or restriction for the time being in force with respect thereto under or by virtue of any enactment, shall be liable to forfeiture."
"Any thing liable to forfeiture under the customs and excise Acts may be seized or detained by any officer or constable or any member of Her Majesty's armed forces or coastguard."
"... where any thing has become liable to forfeiture under the customs and excise Acts-
(a) any ship, aircraft, vehicle, animal, container (including any article of passengers' baggage) or other thing whatsoever which has been used for the carriage, handling, deposit or concealment of the thing so liable to forfeiture, either at a time when it was liable or for the purposes of the commission of the offence for which it later became so liable; and
(b) any other thing mixed, packed or found with the things so liable,
shall also be liable to forfeiture."
"The Commissioners may, as they see fit—
(a) ...
(b) restore, subject to such conditions (if any) as they think fit proper, any thing forfeited or seized under [the Customs and Excise] Acts."
" ... the powers of an appeal tribunal on an appeal under this section shall be confined to a power, where the tribunal are satisfied that the Commissioners or other person making the decision could not reasonably have arrived at it, to do one or more of the following, that is to say—
(a) to direct that the decision, so far as it remains in force, is to cease to have effect from such time as the tribunal may direct;
(b) to require the Commissioners to conduct, in accordance with the directions of the tribunal, a further review of the original decision; and
(c) in the case of a decision which has already been acted on or taken effect and cannot be remedied by a further review, to declare the decision to have been unreasonable and to give directions to the Commissioners as to the steps to be taken for securing that repetitions of the unreasonableness do not occur when comparable circumstances arise in future."
The Respondents' Case
(1) First, he said that the Appellant's case, to the extent that it sought to challenge the legality of the seizure, was an abuse of process on the basis that the goods were condemned by the Uxbridge Magistrates on 26th February 2008.
(2) Second, to the extent that the Appellant was arguing that the decision not to restore the goods was unreasonable, the review decision was one of a range that could reasonably have been arrived at.
Our decision
(1) He entered the red channel honestly intending to declare and pay duty on the goods he was importing;
(2) He had declared all the alcohol and cigarettes of which he was aware, but
(3) He was unaware that his daughter-in-law had packed an additional six cartons of Kent cigarettes in his luggage for his son.
"(whether or not an importer, having suffered a deemed forfeiture under paragraph 5 of Schedule 3, is able to raise the validity of the forfeiture on a review by the Commissioners and on appeal from them to the Tribunal, depends on two questions, first, did the importer have a realistic opportunity to invoke the condemnation procedure and, secondly, if he did are there nonetheless reasons, disclosed by the facts of the case which should persuade the Commissioners or the tribunal to permit him to reopen the question of the validity of the original seizure on an application for return of the goods. The first question will almost always be answered in the affirmative, since facts would have to be very unusual to base a conclusion that an importer was prevented, in the 30 days succeeding forfeiture, from giving notice to the Customs to initiate condemnation procedure in the Magistrates court.
MALCOLM GAMMIE CBE, QC
CHAIRMAN
RELEASE DATE: 11 March 2009
LON/2008/8019