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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 >> Fonecomp Ltd v HM Revenue and Customs [2015] EWCA Civ 39 (03 February 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/39.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 39, [2015] STI 355, [2015] Lloyd's Rep FC 149, [2015] STC 2254, [2015] BVC 9 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
The Upper Tribunal (Tax and Chancery Chamber)
Sales J and Judge Berner
FTC/90/2013
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MCFARLANE
and
LORD JUSTICE BURNETT
____________________
Fonecomp Limited |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs |
Respondents |
____________________
(Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of
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)
Mr John McGuinness QC, Mr Mark Cunningham QC, Mr James Puzey, Mr Nicholas Chapman and Mr Howard Watkinson (instructed by HM Revenue and Customs Solicitors Office) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 22-23 October 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden:
25. It should be borne in mind that, according to settled case-law, the right of taxable persons to deduct VAT due or already paid on goods purchased and services received as inputs from the VAT which they are liable to pay is a fundamental principle of the common system of VAT established by the relevant EU legislation (see Joined Cases C-80/11 and C-142/11 Mahagében and Dávid [2012] ECR, paragraph 37 and the case-law cited).
26 In that regard, the Court has consistently held that the right of deduction provided for in Article 167 et seq. of Directive 2006/112 is an integral part of the VAT scheme and in principle may not be limited. In particular, the right of deduction is exercisable immediately in respect of all the taxes charged on transactions relating to inputs (see Joined Cases C-110/98 to C-147/98 Gabalfrisa and Others [2000] ECR I-1577, paragraph 43; Case C-63/04 Centralan Property [2005] ECR I-11087, paragraph 50; Joined Cases C-439/04 and C-440/04 Kittel and Recolta Recycling [2006] ECR I-6161, paragraph 47; and Mahagében and Dávid, paragraph 38).
55 Where the tax authorities find that the right to deduct has been exercised fraudulently, they are permitted to claim repayment of the deducted sums retroactively (see, inter alia, Case 268/83 Rompelman [1985] ECR 655, paragraph 24; Case C-110/94 INZO [1996] ECR I-857, paragraph 24; and Gabalfrisa, paragraph 46). It is a matter for the national court to refuse to allow the right to deduct where it is established, on the basis of objective evidence, that that right is being relied on for fraudulent ends (see Fini H, paragraph 34).
56 In the same way, a taxable person who knew or should have known that, by his purchase, he was taking part in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT must, for the purposes of the Sixth Directive, be regarded as a participant in that fraud, irrespective of whether or not he profited by the resale of the goods.
57 That is because in such a situation the taxable person aids the perpetrators of the fraud and becomes their accomplice.
58 In addition, such an interpretation, by making it more difficult to carry out fraudulent transactions, is apt to prevent them.
59 Therefore, it is for the referring court to refuse entitlement to the right to deduct where it is ascertained, having regard to objective factors, that the taxable person knew or should have known that, by his purchase, he was participating in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT, and to do so even where the transaction in question meets the objective criteria which form the basis of the concepts of 'supply of goods effected by a taxable person acting as such' and 'economic activity'.
60 It follows from the foregoing that the answer to the questions must be that where a recipient of a supply of goods is a taxable person who did not and could not know that the transaction concerned was connected with a fraud committed by the seller, Article 17 of the Sixth Directive must be interpreted as meaning that it precludes a rule of national law under which the fact that the contract of sale is void – by reason of a civil law provision which renders that contract incurably void as contrary to public policy for unlawful basis of the contract attributable to the seller – causes that taxable person to lose the right to deduct the VAT he has paid. It is irrelevant in this respect whether the fact that the contract is void is due to fraudulent evasion of VAT or to other fraud.
61 By contrast, where it is ascertained, having regard to objective factors, that the supply is to a taxable person who knew or should have known that, by his purchase, he was participating in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT, it is for the national court to refuse that taxable person entitlement to the right to deduct.
43. Consequently, since the refusal of the right of deduction is an exception to the application of the fundamental principle constituted by that right, it is incumbent upon the competent tax authorities to establish, to the requisite legal standard, the objective evidence needed to substantiate the conclusion that the taxable person knew, or should have known, that the transaction relied on as a basis for the right of deduction was connected with fraud committed by the supplier or by another trader acting upstream or downstream in the chain of supply (see Mahagében and Dávid, paragraph 49).
44. It follows that, if the referring court were to find that the supplies of goods at issue in the case before it had actually been carried out and that Bonik had subsequently used those goods for the purposes of its taxed transactions, it would be for that court subsequently to determine whether the tax authorities concerned had established the existence of objective evidence to the effect described above.
45. In those circumstances, the answer to the questions referred is that Articles 2, 9, 14, 62, 63, 167, 168 and 178 of Directive 2006/112 must be interpreted as meaning that, in circumstances such as those of the case before the referring court, a taxable person may not be refused the right to deduct VAT in relation to a supply of goods on the ground that, in view of fraud or irregularities committed upstream or downstream of that supply, the supply is considered not to have actually taken place, where it has not been established on the basis of objective evidence that the taxable person knew, or should have known, that the transaction relied on as a basis for the right of deduction was connected with VAT fraud committed upstream or downstream in the chain of supply – a matter which it is for the referring court to determine.
GROUND 1
The Kittel principle applies where fraudulent evasion (meaning the dishonest non-payment) of VAT occurs in the same chain of supply as the transaction giving rise to the input tax deduction claim. That is the "connection" required by the Kittel principle. It does not apply to the so-called "contra-trading" scenario, where no such "connection" exists.
38. As the Court has repeatedly held, the right to deduct provided for in Article 167 et seq. of Directive 2006/112 is an integral part of the VAT scheme and in principle may not be limited. In particular, the right to deduct is exercisable immediately in respect of all the taxes charged on transactions relating to inputs (see, inter alia, Joined Cases C-110/98 to C-147/98 Gabalfrisa and Others [2000] ECR I-1577, paragraph 43; Joined Cases C-439/04 and C-440/04 Kittel and Recolta Recycling [2006] ECR I-6161, paragraph 47; Case C-392/09 Uszodaépíto [2010] ECR I-8791, paragraph 34; and Commission v Hungary, paragraph 43).
39 The deduction system is intended to relieve the trader entirely of the burden of the VAT payable or paid in the course of all his economic activities. The common system of VAT consequently ensures neutrality of taxation of all economic activities, whatever the purpose or results of those activities, provided that they are themselves subject in principle to VAT (see, inter alia, Gabalfrisa and Others, paragraph 44; Case C-255/02 Halifax and Others [2006] ECR I-1609, paragraph 78; Kittel and Recolta Recycling, paragraph 48; and Case C-438/09 Dankowski [2010] ECR I-14009, paragraph 24).
40 The question whether the VAT payable on the prior or subsequent sales of the goods concerned has or has not been paid to the public purse is irrelevant to the right of the taxable person to deduct input VAT. VAT applies to each transaction by way of production or distribution after deduction of the VAT directly borne by the various cost components (see order in Case C-395/02 Transport Service [2004] ECR I-1991, paragraph 26; judgments in Joined Cases C-354/03, C-355/03 and C-484/03 Optigen and Others [2006] ECR I-483, paragraph 54; and Kittel and Recolta Recycling, paragraph 49).
39. By the same token, a taxable person who knew, or should have known, that, by his purchase, he was taking part in a transaction connected with VAT fraud must, for the purposes of Directive 2006/112, be regarded as a participant in that fraud, whether or not he profits from the resale of the goods or the use of the services in the context of the taxable transactions subsequently carried out by him (see, to that effect, Kittel and Recolta Recycling, paragraph 56, and Mahagében and Dávid, paragraph 46).
In reality, the methods used are as fanciful and complicated as the imaginations of the people who think them up. I therefore agree with Advocate General Poiares Maduro who, in point 8 of his Opinion in Optigen and Others, finds that in every case the bottom line is that an amount received in respect of VAT is not declared.
[62] The principle of legal certainty provides no warrant for restricting the connection, which must be established, to a fraudulent evasion which immediately precedes a trader's purchase. If the circumstances of that purchase are such that a person knows or should know that his purchase is or will be connected with fraudulent evasion, it cannot matter a jot that that evasion precedes or follows that purchase. That trader's knowledge brings him within the category of participant. He is a participant whatever the stage at which the evasion occurs.
"22. The argument that a trader in a clean chain cannot be affected by anything which happens in a dirty chain is in my judgment wholly misconceived. Mr Young argued that there is nothing inherently wrong with contra-trading, a statement which, put in that way, is true: a trader who both imports and exports may legitimately organise his sales and purchases so that, at the end of a VAT period, he has little to pay, or a repayment claim. If he does so for reasons of cash flow, his conduct is unexceptionable. But that is not the reason for the contra-trading seen in cases of this kind. As has been said many times, not least by the then Chancellor in Blue Sphere Global Ltd v Revenue and Customs Commissioners [2009] STC 2239, its purpose is to conceal the fraud in the dirty chain and to make it harder to combat. The appellants' argument necessarily treats "clean" as synonymous with "innocent", but a clean chain in cases of this kind—that is, one in which each of the traders accounts correctly for VAT—is not innocent; it is an integral part of the fraudulent scheme. Even if I entertained any doubt (which I do not) that as a matter of EU law there is sufficient connection between a trader in the clean chain and the default in the dirty chain, there remains an insuperable connection with the fraudulent purpose of the clean chain."
GROUND 2
(a) What constitutes a connection between the fraud and the transaction for which the trader seeks to exercise his right to deduct?
(c) Fonecomp's acquisition of the phones in Deal 1 in July 2006 was connected with Klick's acquisition and disposal of them in the senses: (i) that they were the same phones and were sold and acquired in transactions close in time, (ii) that the input and output VAT were offset [in Klick's VAT return], and (iii) that the acquisition aided Klick's sales (FTT, [203]).
(d) Fonecomp's acquisition of the phones in Deal 2 in July 2006 was in the same sense connected with Klick's acquisition and disposal of them (FTT, [205]).
(e) Accordingly, for each Deal, the FTT found that Fonecomp's purchase was connected with Klick's fraudulent arrangements in relation to, and hence was connected with, the fraudulent evasion of VAT by Softlink (FTT, [206] – [210]).
The assessment whether a particular transaction is connected with VAT fraud depends on objective factors which, in contrast to questions relating to knowledge or means of knowledge of the trader, may well be outside the knowledge of the trader.
(b) What is the degree of knowledge of the fraud which the trader must have in order to be liable as a participant in it?
[58] As I have endeavoured to emphasise, the essence of the approach of the court in Kittel was to provide a means of depriving those who participate in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT by extending the category of participants and, thus, of those whose transactions do not meet the objective criteria which determine the scope of the right to deduct. The court preserved the principle of legal certainty; it did not trump it.
[59] The test in Kittel is simple and should not be over-refined. It embraces not only those who know of the connection but those who "should have known". Thus it includes those who should have known from the circumstances which surround their transactions that they were connected to fraudulent evasion. If a trader should have known that the only reasonable explanation for the transaction in which he was involved was that it was connected with fraud and if it turns out that the transaction was connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT then he should have known of that fact. He may properly be regarded as a participant for the reasons explained in Kittel.
[60] The true principle to be derived from Kittel does not extend to circumstances in which a taxable person should have known that by his purchase it was more likely than not that his transaction was connected with fraudulent evasion. But a trader may be regarded as a participant where he should have known that the only reasonable explanation for the circumstances in which his purchase took place was that it was a transaction connected with such fraudulent evasion.
We do not find that Fonecomp knew or should have known that Softlink would default or that there was a defaulter whose fraud Klick would arrange to cover up. We find instead that Fonecomp must have come to the conclusion that somehow its purchase and sale were assisting a VAT fraud by an Importer which had happened or was planned.
[37] In my judgment, there are likely to be many cases in which a participant in a sophisticated fraud is shown to have actual or blind-eye knowledge that the transaction in which he is participating is connected with that fraud, without knowing, for example, whether his chain is a clean or dirty chain, whether contra-trading is necessarily involved at all, or whether the fraud has at its heart merely a dishonest intention to abscond without paying tax, or that intention plus one or more multifarious means of achieving a cover-up while the absconding takes place.
a question referred to the Court for a preliminary ruling is identical to a question on which the Court has already ruled, where the reply to such a question may be clearly deduced from existing case-law or where the answer to the question referred for a preliminary ruling admits of no reasonable doubt...
Conclusion
Lord Justice McFarlane:
Lord Justice Burnett
The decision of the FTT: facts and conclusions
[4] The facts are extensively set out in the decision of the FTT, reported at [2012] UKFTT 102 (TC), and can for the purpose of this appeal be stated quite briefly.
[5] The two transactions of Fonecomp in issue were:
(a) Deal 1: the purchase by Fonecomp of 1,100 Nokia 9300i phones and 1,200 Nokia 8801 phones from PDA Stuff Limited for Ł759,226.25, including VAT of Ł113,076.25, and the sale of those phones to Axess Denmark ApS ('Axess'), a company incorporated in Denmark, for Ł679,200. The purchase and sale invoices were dated 11 July 2006; and
(b) Deal 2: the purchase by Fonecomp of 900 Nokia N80 phones and 500 Nokia N91 phones from TM Global Limited (trading as Team Mobile) for Ł475,875, including VAT of Ł70,875, and the sale of those phones to Axess. The purchase and sale invoices were dated 26 July 2006.
[6] The FTT found that Softlink had defaulted in its VAT payment in respect of transactions undertaken by it in August 2006, after the date of the July transactions carried out by Fonecomp. Softlink was not involved in transactions in the goods bought and sold by Fonecomp, but the FTT found that Fonecomp's purchases were connected to Softlink's default through what has been described as a 'contra-trader', a company called Klick (UK) Limited ('Klick').
[7] As the FTT recorded (at [5]), contra-trader is a term used by HMRC (Mr Patchett-Joyce referred to it as 'an HMRC construct') to describe a trader which (a) buys goods from a defaulter and exports them claiming, in what is termed the 'dirty chain', the input VAT ('the dirty input VAT') on the purchase; and (b) in a 'clean chain', imports goods and sells them to a third trader, and then offsets the dirty input VAT against the clean output VAT on the sale to the third trader. The dirty input VAT is by this means sought to be transmuted into clean input VAT in the hands of the third trader; or at any rate the third trader is sought to be so distanced from the default that he could not know of his connection to it, or HMRC discover it.
[8] That is a description of a straightforward example of contra-trading. More complex examples may be found, where the goods pass through a number of intermediate traders in a chain. In this case Fonecomp, alleged to be the third trader in the description of contra-trading, did not purchase the goods from Klick. It was distanced from Klick by one or two intermediate traders in the clean chain. It was alleged by HMRC that, first, the activities of Klick provided the connection between Fonecomp's purchases and Softlink's default, and secondly that there was a wider managed scheme associated with Klick's transactions, involving 37 other traders including Fonecomp, in an organised assault on the revenue which involved reclaiming the VAT on which Softlink defaulted, amounting to some Ł66 million.
[9] The FTT made detailed findings of fact in relation to Softlink, Klick and the alleged wider 'Klick' scheme. It concluded:
(a) Softlink had a liability to pay VAT in respect of 194 deals it had undertaken between 15 and 25 August 2006, that it did not pay that VAT and that at the time it entered into the transactions it had not intended to pay that VAT. Softlink fraudulently evaded, and at the time of the deals had intended to evade, the Ł66 million of VAT on its sales to Klick between those dates (FTT, [2012] UKFTT 102 (TC) at [164]).
(b) Klick's activities in June, July and August 2006 were part of a planned scheme which encompassed Softlink's default. The object of that scheme was to fuel chains of supply in June and July 2006 with input tax credits which could eventually be claimed by exporters, and to match those credits with a later fraudulent VAT default by Softlink leaving a small VAT reclaim at the end of the quarter. All Klick's sales in June and July 2006 were by this arrangement connected to Softlink's later fraudulent default. Softlink's default was planned as part of the same operation as Klick's activities in those months (FTT, [166]–[167]).
(c) Fonecomp's acquisition of the phones in Deal 1 in July 2006 was connected with Klick's acquisition and disposal of them in the senses: (i) that they were the same phones and were sold and acquired in transactions close in time, (ii) that the input and output VAT were offset, and (iii) that the acquisition aided Klick's sales (FTT, [203]).
(d) Fonecomp's acquisition of the phones in Deal 2 in July 2006 was in the same sense connected with Klick's acquisition and disposal of them (FTT at [205]).
(e) Accordingly, for each Deal, the FTT found that Fonecomp's purchase was connected with Klick's fraudulent arrangements in relation to, and hence was connected with, the fraudulent evasion of VAT by Softlink (FTT, [206]–[210]).
[10] The FTT concluded that Fonecomp's participation as an exporter in the scheme involving Klick and Softlink did not mean that it necessarily knew that it was part of the scheme (FTT, [219]). It nonetheless found that, since Fonecomp knew when it made its purchases all the facts from which it should have concluded that the deals assisted or were connected to VAT fraud, it should have known that its purchases were connected with fraud at the time it made them (FTT, [228]).
[11] The FTT summarised its reasons for reaching that conclusion at [222]–[229]. At [222] it referred to its findings in relation to the following matters as indicating that the parties to Fonecomp's transactions were not concerned with precisely what phones they were buying and selling, and hence proceeded in a manner which was at variance from what one would expect in a normal commercial transaction:
(a) the lack of specification, particularly on purchase orders from Axess;
(b) the lack of proper inspection of the phones despite their value;
(c) the purchase and sales of phones designed for the US market and sold with 'Central European spec'; and
(d) the lack of defined clear contractual terms (time of payment, title etc).
[12] The FTT found that the only explanation of these factors was that what Fonecomp's customer (and possibly Fonecomp and its supplier) wanted was that there would be a sale and export (that is, any sale and export), and was indifferent to precisely what was said to be exported because the recipient already knew precisely what it was getting because the chain had been pre-arranged (FTT, [223]).
[13] At [224], the FTT focused further on the European and US specifications of the phones that were the subject of the transactions. It referred back to its findings at [136] to [144], where it concluded that the nature of both the types of phones was such that there was no likely explanation other than that they had been imported into the UK in order to be exported. The FTT further concluded, at [225], that the only reasonable explanation of these features was that the Deals were part of a scheme for the import, onsale and later export of the phones, and that the only explanation for such a scheme was that the transactions in the phones were part of, and aided, a VAT fraud.
[14] Earlier in its judgment, the FTT had found that Fonecomp knew the mechanics of VAT fraud, it knew that its suppliers were back-to-back trading and it knew there could be VAT fraud affecting the chains of supply to it. In those circumstances, the FTT concluded that Fonecomp should have known that the factors referred to by the FTT, which it found (at [228]) were known to Fonecomp at the time it made its purchases, led ineluctably to the conclusion that the Deals assisted or were connected to such a fraud (FTT, [226]).