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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Atlantic Electronics Ltd v HM Revenue and Customs (Rev 1) [2013] EWCA Civ 651 (12 June 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/651.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 651 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
Judge Colin Bishopp
FTC/69&70/2012
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
and
LORD JUSTICE RYDER
____________________
Atlantic Electronics Ltd |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Christopher Foulkes and Karen Robinson (instructed by Howes Percival) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 14 March 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Ryder:
"In a chain of transactions between traders all of whom are honest each trader will account to HMRC for the output tax received (in respect of which the trader acts, broadly speaking, as agent for HMRC: Elida Gibbs Ltd v Customs & Excise Comrs [1997] QB 499), less any output tax incurred, which he will claim from HMRC. He will, ordinarily, need most of the money received from his sales to pay his supplier and the VAT due. The full extent of any chain will be patent. Where there is dishonesty the position is different. It is in the interests of those who seek to defraud HMRC of VAT to hide the full extent of any chain by the use of buffer companies. Such persons lack any interest in seeing that they, or the companies through whom they operate, are able to account to HMRC for all the VAT that they should."
"7. I should also record that it was initially envisaged that exchange of witness statements would be completed as long ago as 2008 but, as is often the case in MTIC appeals, that timescale proved overly optimistic since additional evidence has emerged as time has passed, and there have been repeated applications by HMRC for permission to adduce that additional evidence, of which the application before the judge was only one example. It seems that almost all of the applications have been strongly resisted, and they have met with mixed success.
8. I should add for completeness that over the course of the appeal HMRC applied for, and were granted, several extensions of time for complying with a number of requirements. The Company, too, sought and obtained some indulgence. I do not consider that past conduct offers much assistance in deciding the matter before me, and I have left it out of account."
Appeal to the Court of Appeal
"1. The point of principle is whether there should be placed before the FTT material which is (a) not evidence and (b) not directly relevant to the VAT fraud alleged against the Appellant.
2. It is also not easy to see from the decision of the UT what error of law it identified in the decision of the FTT."
"applied the correct principles and who has taken into account matters which should be taken into account and left out of account matters which are irrelevant, unless the court is satisfied that the decision is so plainly wrong that it must be regarded as outside the generous ambit of the discretion entrusted to the judge."
See, for example, Wallbrook Trustee v Fattal & Ors [2008] EWCA Civ 427 per Lawrence Collins LJ at [33]. Before the UT it was for HMRC to demonstrate that the FTT had applied the wrong approach in principle or that in applying the correct approach, the FTT had reached a decision that no Tribunal, properly directed, could have reached on the facts: Connect Global Ltd v Commissioners for HMRC [2010] UKUT 372 at [48] per Warren J.
Error of law by the FTT
39. "….The case is important to both parties, the issues are complex, the costs substantial albeit that the 1986 costs rules do not apply and the resources of the Appellant are not unlimited. If the conviction evidence is admitted the Appellant must have a proper opportunity to deal with it in order to participate fully under Rule 2(3)(b).
40. The evidence of dishonesty by Morganrise's director in 2006 is in my view potentially relevant; how relevant would depend on examination of the facts. This would have involved considerable work and costs for the Appellant. It would almost certainly have added materially to the length of the trial and resulted in delay. The evidence is already very stale. The conviction did not involve the facts in this case, it involved a different type of goods and the Appellant had no dealings with Morganrise.
41. If the evidence had been admitted, the Tribunal would have needed to consider the prosecution opening note with care although much of it did not concern Mr. Ahmed.
42. The complexity of the criminal proceedings is shown by the length of the trial and the fact that the case summary to assist the court which had been produced to the Tribunal extended to 1435 paragraphs on 361 pages. In HMRC's skeleton argument for this application, 241 paragraphs of the case summary were highlighted although not to the exclusion of the others. This indicates the extent of investigation which would be necessary for the Appellant.
43. The evidence which has already been served and admitted is extensive and complex. This material would have added substantially to the complexity of the trial.
44. In my judgment adopting the words of Lord Bingham in O'Brien v Chief Constable of South Wales Police [2005] 2 AC 534 at [6],
'… admission of the evidence will distort the trial and distract the attention of the decision-maker by focussing attention on issues collateral to the issue to be decided.'
45. Although the Tribunal is a specialist Tribunal, it contains non-legal members for whom complex evidence over a long trial presents a real challenge. This appeal will be challenging without this evidence; the admission of this evidence would have added substantially to its complexity. It is relevant that the Appellant had no dealings with Morganrise which only appeared twice in the Appellant's supply chains."
20. "In my judgment that analysis of the relevant considerations, with respect to the judge, is quite wrong, It ignores two significant facts: first, that a conviction and the indictment on which it was based are matters of public record; and, second, that the conviction was in August 2011, and the application for permission to put in evidence of it was made in September 2011, about five weeks later – it could not, realistically, have been made much more promptly. The judge also seems to have been influenced by his perception that the evidence was stale. That may be true of the evidence on which the conviction was based, but it was not true of the evidence of the conviction. Had the conviction been earlier, say in 2008, I find it difficult to see how evidence of it, adduced in accordance with the directed timetable, could properly have been excluded – in other words, the only reason why HMRC had to ask for permission, and the only reason why the appellant had any grounds for resisting its inclusion, was that it was put in after the directed deadline had expired. But, here, that is not a ground on which HMRC can be criticised.
21. The judge recognised that the conviction was, at least potentially, relevant. But he then concentrated on the prejudice to the Company its introduction would cause, as he perceived it, to the exclusion of any other consideration. In particular, in addition to overlooking the two facts I have identified above, he did not advert to, let alone consider, the prejudice to HMRC which a refusal to admit the evidence would cause, made only a cursory examination of relevance, and did not undertake a balancing exercise.
22. For those reasons I concluded that his decision could not stand and that I should set aside his direction and re-make it."
The disputed material
a) that evidence of the convictions was recent not stale
b) that the convictions were relevant to facts in issue in the Company's appeal (i.e. the knowing participation of Morganrise in fraudulent contra-trading)
c) that the fact that the broker deals in the criminal and the Company's transaction chains involved different goods i.e. goods other than mobile telephones is not determinative
d) that the existence of a (buffer) trader between the Company and Morganrise in the chains might lessen the probative value of the criminal materials but is not determinative
e) that the admission of the prosecution opening would not add materially to the length or complexity of the hearing
f) that the Company would not need to make detailed investigations into the criminal trial in order to avoid prejudice by the admission of the material,
g) that on the application of the correct principles, the balance of prejudice was in favour of the Revenue and
h) that reliance should not have been placed upon the existence of a Contempt of Court Act order that had been made during the Criminal trial.
"[32] … HMRC need to establish that Morganrise was deliberately and dishonestly masking the connection of the Appellant's purchases with other dirty chains. The Appellant was not implicated in the prosecution"
"[37] … [Mr Foulkes] said that the main reason for the disputed evidence was to prove dishonest default by Morganrise rather than the knowledge of the Appellant. The evidence was highly probative: Morganrise had supplied the Appellant through [another trader]".
Lord Justice Beatson:
Lady Justice Arden:
"… this Court should not interfere with case management decisions made by a judge who has applied the correct principles, and who has taken into account the matters which should be taken into account and left out of account matters which are irrelevant, unless satisfied that the decision is so plainly wrong that it must be regarded as outside the generous ambit of the discretion entrusted to the judge. It is pertinent to have in mind, in the present case, that the judge was well aware of the need for caution when considering whether to direct a trial of issues on assumed facts; and was well aware that there were dangers in the course which he decided to take. The judge appreciated that there was a risk that his decision would lead to delay and to wasted costs. If his approach to the evaluation of the risk was correct, I would not think it right to substitute my own view for the conclusion that he reached."