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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 >> Beadle v HM Revenue and Customs [2020] EWCA Civ 562 (29 April 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/562.html Cite as: [2020] STI 1136, [2020] BTC 11, [2021] 1 All ER 237, [2020] EWCA Civ 562, [2020] WLR 3028, [2020] 1 WLR 3028, [2020] STC 1058, [2020] WLR(D) 255 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (Mr Justice Arnold and Judge Jonathan Cannan)
[2019] UKUT 0101 (TCC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN
and
LADY JUSTICE SIMLER
____________________
DAVID BEADLE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondent |
____________________
Ms Aparna Nathan QC and Ms Marika Lemos (instructed by HMRC Solicitor's Office) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 25 March 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email, release to BAILII and publication on the Courts and Tribunals Judiciary website. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 28 April 2010 at 10.30am
Lady Justice Simler:
Introduction
The statutory provisions
"3. Circumstances in which partner payment notices may be given
3(1) Where a partnership return has been made in respect of a partnership, HMRC may give a notice (a "partner payment notice") to each relevant partner of the partnership if Conditions A to C are met.
3(2) Condition A is that—
(a) a tax enquiry is in progress in relation to the partnership return, or
(b) an appeal has been made in relation to an amendment of the return or against a conclusion stated by a closure notice in relation to a tax enquiry into the return.
3(3) Condition B is that the return or claim or, as the case may be, appeal is made on the basis that a particular tax advantage ("the asserted advantage") results from particular tax arrangements ("the chosen arrangements").
3(4) …
3(5) Condition C is that one or more of the following requirements are met –
(a) HMRC has given (or, at the same time as giving the partner payment notice, gives) the representative partner, or a successor of that partner, a follower notice under Chapter 2 –
(i) in relation to the same return or, as the case may be, appeal, and
(ii) by reason of the same tax advantage and the chosen arrangements;
(b) the chosen arrangements are DOTAS arrangements (within the meaning of section 219(5) and (6));
(c) the relevant partner in question has been given a GAAR counteraction notice……
3(6) "GAAR counteraction notice" has the meaning given by section 219(7)."
"5 Representations about a partner payment notice
5(1) This paragraph applies where a partner payment notice has been given to a relevant partner under paragraph 3 (and not withdrawn).
5(2) The relevant partner has 90 days beginning with the day that notice is given to send written representations to HMRC—
(a) objecting to the notice on the grounds that Condition A, B or C in that paragraph was not met, or
(b) objecting to the amount specified in the notice under paragraph 4(1)(b),
5(3) HMRC must consider any representations made in accordance with subparagraph (2).
5(4) Having considered the representations, HMRC must—
(a) if representations were made under sub-paragraph (2)(a), determine whether—
(i) to confirm the partner payment notice (with or without amendment), or
(ii) to withdraw the partner payment notice, and
(b) if representations were made under sub-paragraph (2)(b) (and the notice is not withdrawn under paragraph (a)), determine whether a different amount ought to have been specified as the understated partner tax, and then—
(i) confirm the amount specified in the notice, or
(ii) amend the notice to specify a different amount, and notify P accordingly".
"6 Effect of partner payment notice
6(1) This paragraph applies where a partner payment notice has been given to a relevant partner (and not withdrawn).
6(2) The relevant partner must make a payment ("the accelerated partner payment") to HMRC of the amount specified in the notice in accordance with paragraph 4(1)(b).
6(3) The accelerated partner payment is to be treated as a payment on account of the understated partner tax (see paragraph 4).
6(4) The accelerated partner payment must be made before the end of the payment period.
6(5) 'The payment period' means—
(a) if the relevant partner made no representations under paragraph 5, the period of 90 days beginning with the day on which the partner payment notice is given;
(b) if the relevant partner made such representations, whichever of the following ends later -
(i) the 90 day period mentioned in paragraph (a);
(ii) the period of 30 days beginning with the day on which the relevant partner is notified under paragraph 5 of HMRC's determination…"
"to change the financial benefit of tax avoidance arrangements by ending the economic benefit to taxpayers of retaining an amount equal to the disputed tax until the issue is finally determined against them (if the arrangements are ultimately held to be ineffective)."
"7 Penalty for failure to comply with partner payment notice
Section 226 (penalty for failure to make accelerated payment on time) applies to accelerated partner payments as if
(a) references in that section to the accelerated payment were to the accelerated partner payment,
(b) references to P were to the relevant partner, and
(d) 'the payment period' had the meaning given by paragraph 6(5)."
"Penalty for failure to pay accelerated payment
(1) This section applies where an accelerated payment notice is given by virtue of section 219(2)(a) (notice given while tax enquiry is in progress) (and not withdrawn).
(2) If any amount of the accelerated payment is unpaid at the end of the payment period, P is liable to a penalty of 5% of that amount.
(3) If any amount of the accelerated payment is unpaid after the end of the period of 5 months beginning with the penalty day, P is liable to a penalty of 5% of that amount.
(4) If any amount of the accelerated payment is unpaid after the end of the period of 11 months beginning with the penalty day, P is liable to a penalty of 5% of that amount.
(5) 'The penalty day' means the day immediately following the end of the payment period.
…
(7) Paragraphs 9 to 18 (other than paragraph 11(5)) of Schedule 56 to FA 2009 (provisions which apply to penalties for failures to make payments of tax on time) apply, with any necessary modifications, to a penalty under this section in relation to a failure by P to pay an amount of the accelerated payment as they apply to a penalty under that Schedule in relation to a failure by a person to pay an amount of tax."
"9 Special reduction
9(1) If HMRC think it right because of special circumstances, they may reduce a penalty under any paragraph of this Schedule.
9(2) In sub-paragraph (1) 'special circumstances' does not include—
(a) ability to pay, or
(b) the fact that a potential loss of revenue from one taxpayer is balanced by a potential over-payment by another. …"
"16 Reasonable excuse
16(1) If P satisfies HMRC or (on appeal) the First-tier Tribunal or Upper Tribunal that there is a reasonable excuse for a failure to make a payment—
(a) liability to a penalty under any paragraph of this Schedule does not arise in relation to that failure, and
(b) the failure does not count as a default for the purposes of paragraphs 6, 8B, 8C, 8G and 8H.
16(2) For the purposes of sub-paragraph (1)—
(a) an insufficiency of funds is not a reasonable excuse unless attributable to events outside P's control,
(b) where P relies on any other person to do anything, that is not a reasonable excuse unless P took reasonable care to avoid the failure, and
(c) where P had a reasonable excuse for the failure but the excuse has ceased, P is to be treated as having continued to have the excuse if the failure is remedied without unreasonable delay after the excuse ceased."
The facts
The UT judgment below
"44. In our judgment Judge Richards was correct to hold in the present case that the FTT had no jurisdiction to entertain the Appellant's challenge to the PPN for the following reasons. First, we accept that the authorities establish the exception or limit to the exception to the exclusivity principle which we have stated in paragraph 30 above, but we do not accept counsel for the Appellant's argument that the availability of a defence to enforcement action on public law grounds can only be excluded by express statutory language. In our judgment, the availability of such a defence can also be excluded by necessary implication from the statutory scheme. This is in effect what the Divisional Court and the House of Lords respectively concluded in Quietlynn Ltd v Plymouth City Council [1988] QB 114 and R v Wicks [1998] AC 93 as analysed by the House of Lords in Boddington; and see also R & J Birkett v Revenue and Customs Commissioners [2017] UKUT 89 (TCC) at [30] (Upper Tribunal).
45. Secondly, in the present case we consider that the statutory scheme concerning PPNs and penalty notices does by necessary implication exclude the possibility of a challenge by the taxpayer to a PPN on public law grounds in the context of an appeal to the FTT against a penalty notice. This is for two reasons. The first is the fact that Parliament has provided rights of appeal against the underlying tax assessment and against a penalty notice, but not against a PPN. In the case of a PPN, Parliament has only provided a right to make representations (within a specified time limit) which HMRC are required to consider. In our view, the absence of a right of appeal against PPNs is a clear indication that Parliament does not intend taxpayers to be able to challenge PPNs on appeal to the FTT. If taxpayers cannot do so directly, then it would be very odd to permit them to do so indirectly by way of an appeal against a penalty. The second reason, which reinforces the first, is that permitting such a challenge would be contrary to the design and purpose of the PPN regime, as to which we agree with the observations of Judge Gargan we have quoted above."
The appeal
Ground A
"It would in my opinion be a very strange use of language to describe the respondent's behaviour in relation to this litigation as an abuse or misuse by him of the process of the court. He did not select the procedure to be adopted. He is merely seeking to defend proceedings brought against him by the appellants. In so doing he is seeking only to exercise the ordinary right of any individual to defend an action against him on the ground that he is not liable for the whole sum claimed by the plaintiff. Moreover he puts forward his defence as a matter of right, whereas in an application for judicial review, success would require an exercise of the court's discretion in his favour.…… I find it impossible to accept that the right to challenge the decision of a local authority in course of defending an action for non-payment can have been swept away by Order 53, which was directed to introducing a procedural reform. As my noble and learned friend Lord Scarman said in R v IRC ex p. Federation of Self Employed and Small Businesses Ltd… "The new RSC, Ord.53 is a procedural reform of great importance in the field of public law, but it does not – indeed, cannot – either extend or diminish the substantive law. Its function is limited to ensuring 'ubi jus, ibi remedium.' "… Nor, in my opinion, did section 31 of the Supreme Court Act 1981… have the effect of limiting the rights of the defendant sub silentio. I would adopt the words of Viscount Simonds in Pyx Granite Co. Ltd. v Ministry of Housing and Local Government [1960] AC 260, 286 as follows:
"It is a principle not by any means to be whittled down that the subject's recourse to Her Majesty's Courts for the determination of his rights is not to be excluded except by clear words." "
"to examine the particular statutory context to determine whether a court hearing a criminal or civil case has jurisdiction to rule on a defence based upon arguments of invalidity of subordinate legislation or an administrative act under it. There are situations in which Parliament may legislate to preclude such challenges being made, in the interest, for example, of promoting certainty about the legitimacy of administrative acts on which the public may have to rely."
"The duties imposed on HMRC by section 222 are heavy ones, particularly in the absence of any statutory appeal to the FTT, and it would be quite wrong for us to assume that HMRC would be likely to treat the exercise as a formality. Clearly, it is their duty to give serious and careful consideration to the representations which are made, supplemented if necessary by HMRC's acknowledged duty to deal in good faith with proper representations made to them by taxpayers, whether or not falling strictly within the scope of the APN."
Ground B
"202. There is no need to conduct this exercise. Even if the appellant had a reasonable belief, subjectively, objectively or both, and based upon professional advice, that he was not liable to pay the understated partner tax liability, this could not form a reasonable excuse for the failure to pay the PPN within the payment period.
203. Applying the test in the Clean Car Company, a reasonable taxpayer in the appellant's position would make payment of the sum under the PPN within the payment period and make whatever challenges (whether statutory or extra statutory) to the underlying liability he or she chose to do in the mean-time. This would be the case, whatever his or her reasonable belief as to the merits of his substantive challenge. If such a challenge were successful then the appellant would receive a refund or repayment but this cannot reasonably excuse [not] making a payment [of] the sum due under the PPN that Parliament has required should be made in the interim.
…
209. The appellant's reasoning, if accepted, would permit any taxpayer to circumvent the evident intention of Parliament as to who should hold the tax pending the final determination of the tax liability by allowing taxpayers to institute multiple proceedings in different fora. It would also result in the Tribunal entertaining collateral challenges to the underlying tax liability in penalty proceedings which cannot have been the Parliamentary intention. The statute requires that the taxpayer [pay the tax] in the interim while the underlying liability, if challenged, can be resolved. If the taxpayer is successful in their challenge to the liability they will receive the appropriate rebate from HMRC.
…
210. For same reasons explored above in relation to reasonable excuse, the Tribunal considers that HMRC's view that the appellant's circumstances did not constitute special circumstances was not flawed. …"
"…If the judicial review were to fail then the liability to penalties would not be removed but there would be a statutory right of appeal to the First-tier Tribunal if HMRC were not satisfied that the existence of the judicial review proceedings was a reasonable excuse for not paying the penalties. The taxpayers would have the opportunity first of all to make representations to HMRC and, if those fail, to appeal to the First-tier Tribunal in order to persuade the First-tier Tribunal that they had a reasonable excuse for not paying the penalties. It seems to me that whether or not the claimants accede to the PPN and pay the sum which is said to be due, pending the outcome of the judicial review, or do not pay it, in neither case is the judicial review rendered nugatory."
Lord Justice Moylan:
Sir Ernest Ryder: