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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Sangha & Ors, R. v [2008] EWCA Crim 2562 (18 November 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2008/2562.html Cite as: [2009] STC 570, [2009] Crim LR 212, [2009] 2 Cr App R (S) 17, [2008] STI 2671, [2009] 2 Cr App Rep (S) 17, [2008] EWCA Crim 2562, [2009] Lloyd's Rep FC 84 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM WORCESTER CROWN COURT
His Honour Judge McCreath
(Case No T20067092)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE STADLEN
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE GORDON
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The Queen |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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Bhovinder Singh Sangha Brian Meehan Gerard Martin McAllister |
Appellants |
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Peter Finnigan and Tom Baker (instructed by HM Revenue & Customs) for the Crown
Hearing date : 30 October 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Richards giving the judgment of the court:
The carousel fraud: an overview of the prosecution case
The companies and individuals concerned
The case against the appellants at trial
"Brian John Meehan and Gerard McAllister, between the 23rd day of February 2000 and the 19th day of June 2001, together with Emmanuel Hening and other persons cheated Her Majesty the Queen and the Public Revenue, namely the Commissioners of Customs and Excise, by dishonestly orchestrating artificial trade in mobile telephones by
(i) Purchasing mobile telephones from Handycom SA, Willcom SA and Midafon companies in other EU Member State upon which there was no requirement to pay Value Added Tax at the point of entry into the United Kingdom;
(ii) Using Eurocoin (UK) Ltd and MSCoten Ltd (the 'missing traders') to conduct transactions in respect of the said mobile telephones within the United Kingdom, pretending that the companies were to be operated as bona fide businesses under the VAT system;
(iii) Causing and permitting the charging of amounts described as VAT by the 'missing traders' on invoices raised to Bridge GSM Products Ltd ('the first buffer') which was not paid to the said Commissioners of Customs and Excise;
(iv) Causing and permitting HM Customs and Excise to make repayments of amounts claimed as Value Added Tax credit upon the sale and ultimate removal of the said mobile telephones from the United Kingdom;
To the Commissioners' loss and their gain."
"2.1 As is common in cases of this kind, there was little dispute about the primary facts on which the prosecution case was based. A number of schedules were placed before the jury and were formally admitted as representing, subject to the possibility of occasional error in their compilation, the picture painted by the documentation generated by the relevant transactions.
2.2 That picture, so far as it directly concerned these defendants, amounted to this:
2.3 During the material times, Brian Meehan and Gerard McAllister were responsible for the running of Bridge, a company of which they were both directors and in whose profits they shared equally. It was accepted that Bridge had traded honestly in the mobile phone business until February 2000. Thereafter it turned its attention exclusively to trading in mobile phones, purchasing them from missing traders, paying the purchase price for them not to the UK based missing traders but to the European companies which had sent them into the UK via the missing trader and selling them to other UK traders. The prosecution case was that the UK missing traders and the European exporters were, in reality, the corporate entities of Emanuel Hening.
2.4 Whereas Bridge accounted to Customs and Excise for the VAT which it had recovered from the companies to which it sold the mobile phones, the missing traders did not account for the VAT which they had added to their invoices to Bridge. Instead the VAT was sent by Bridge into bank accounts in the names of the European companies. Accordingly, the direct beneficiary of the fraud was Hening.
2.5 The profits enjoyed by Bridge arose not from VAT evasion but from the mark-up which it added to the goods when it sold them on. The sums received by Bridge from their customers were applied in four ways: … (a) to pay for the goods, including the VAT charged on them; … (b) to make payments to Customs and Excise of the net VAT owed by them (and, no doubt, other taxation liabilities; … (c) to meet their business expenses; … (d) for the private use of the directors of the company.
2.6 The trading patterns of the companies controlled by the other defendants, B-Tel in the case of Mr Singh Sangha and Keep Talking in the case of Mr Burch, were, for all practical purposes, identical.
2.7 None of this was in issue in the case …."
"… It contains in each count particulars of the way in which the prosecution say the fraud was carried out in its entirety, but it is perfectly plain that there are aspects of the fraud in which it cannot be said that any of these defendants had any part to play at all.
Let's look at particulars (i) and (ii) …. What particulars (i) and (ii) relate to, as a cursory reading of them will show, is to the activities of those, including, or perhaps exclusively, Hening, who put in place the mechanism whereby the fraud was to be carried out, the setting up of the missing traders, the pretence that the missing traders were to be operated as bona fide UK traders and so on. That's what particulars (i) and (ii) describe, none of it done by any of the defendants in this case.
I skip over particular (iii) to come to particular (iv), and that … plainly describes what happened at what I have called the back end of the fraud, and whether or not this was a fraud which had as part of its object the ultimate exportation of the goods back to the EU and the repayment of the VAT to the UK exporter, there is no evidence at all connecting any of the defendants with that. So they did not do themselves, directly or indirectly, any of things in particulars (i), (ii) and (iv)."
"But you will say, and rightly say, that none of the defendants in this case caused and/or permitted VAT to be charged on the invoices raised by Eurocoin or MSCoten or Jactrade. Quite right. They didn't. What they did do was to send the VAT which they had obtained on their sales within the UK not to the UK companies which had sold them the goods but to the EU companies, and that role in the fraud is not expressly set out, as you can see, in particular (iii), because the things done in particular (iii) were actually done by Hening or his associates, not by these defendants. They did not create the Eurocoin invoices or the MSCoten invoices or the Jactrade invoices. Hening did or his associates.
So I need to give you a legal direction about how a person might be guilty of an offence even if he did not directly commit it ….
The prosecution in this case must prove in respect of any defendant that he played a part in the fraud knowing that he was playing a role in a fraud against the Revenue and doing so dishonestly. In straightforward terms comes to this, does it not: is it proved against any defendant that when he sent the VAT to the bank accounts of the EU companies, he did so in the knowledge that he was thereby playing a part in the carrying out of a Revenue fraud and he did that dishonestly?"
The confiscation orders: the judge's reasons
"4.13 The relevant offence in this case was a cheat on the Revenue, carried out ultimately by the … failure of the missing traders to account for the VAT charged by them on their sales.
4.14 It was common ground at trial that the trading which involved what may be called the Hening companies (the European exporters and the UK based missing traders) had only one purpose, namely the generation of VAT.
4.15 The means by which the VAT so generated was put beyond the reach of the UK authorities was by the acts of the defendants in this case, making payment for the goods purchased by them not to the UK missing traders from whom they had, on the face of the documents, purchased them but to the European companies which had purported to sell them to the UK missing traders.
4.16 The defendants obtained the funds whereby they were able to make these payments by selling the goods onward within the UK, thus obtaining from the UK second purchasers not only the increased price of the goods but also the VAT on them, offsetting against their VAT liability the sums which they had paid on the purchase of the goods.
4.17 These sums, obtained from the second UK purchasers, were plainly property obtained by the defendants in connection with the commission of the relevant offence. It was precisely these sums which were used, in substantial part, to make payment to the Hening companies for the price of the goods and, of fundamental importance, the VAT on them.
4.18 It was proved at trial that the defendants performed all of those acts in the knowledge that they were thereby participating in a fraud on the Revenue.
4.19 In those circumstances, it is, in my judgment, abundantly clear that these defendants, who are shown by the piercing of the corporate veil to have been the controllers of the relevant companies, obtained property in connection with the commission of the relevant offence, the cheat on the Revenue which amounted, in plain language, to the stealing of VAT which was rightfully due to the Revenue."
"5.5 In my judgment, the property obtained by these defendants in connection with the commission of the offence of cheat were the sums obtained by them on their sales which were used to pay the VAT element of their purchases. It was the stealing of this money by Hening which constituted the cheat. Any additional sums obtained by these defendants cannot realistically be said to have been obtained in connection with the relevant offence."
The statutory provisions
"(1A) The court shall first determine whether the offender has benefited from any relevant criminal conduct.
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(1D) In this Part of this Act 'relevant criminal conduct', in relation to a person convicted of an offence in any proceedings before a court, means … that offence taken together with any other offences of a relevant description which are either (a) offences of which he is convicted in the same proceedings, or (b) offences which the court will be taking into consideration in determining his sentence for the offence in question.
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(4) For the purposes of this Part of this Act a person benefits from an offence if he obtains property as a result of or in connection with its commission and his benefit is the value of the property so obtained.
(5) Where a person derives a pecuniary advantage as a result of or in connection with the commission of an offence, he is to be treated for the purposes of this Part of this Act as if he had obtained as a result of or in connection with the commission of the offence a sum of money equal to the value of the pecuniary advantage.
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(7A) The standard of proof required to determine any question arising under this Part of this Act as to (a) whether a person has benefited from any offence, or … (c) the amount to be recovered in his case, shall be that applicable in civil proceedings. "
The case for the appellants on the appeal
The case for the Crown on the appeal
Discussion
"We reject the submission that in making a confiscation order the Judge is bound to approach the case on the version of the facts before the jury most favourable to the defendant. The case of R v Efionayi … was concerned with sentencing in the strict sense of the word, i.e. a sentence of imprisonment. The principle applied in the context of that case does not apply in the present context. Section 71 of the 1988 Act imposes a duty on the court to make the determinations specified in subsections (1A), (1B) and (6), i.e. whether the defendant has benefited from any relevant criminal conduct, the amount of that benefit and the amounts that might be realised at the time the order is made. In the case of the Crown Court, the court there means the trial judge, and does not include the jury. The same determinations fall to be made under section 72A, where the determinations are postponed. The fact that the determinations are separate from the trial process itself is emphasised by section 71(7A) of the 1988 Act, which provides that the standard of proof required to determine any question arising under Part VI of the Act is that applicable in civil proceedings."
"Whether the proceeds of sale received by [the appellant's associates] in the present case were initially received on their own personal behalf or on behalf of the conspirators as a whole was a matter for the judge to decide on the evidence before him. In fact, there was evidence on which he could find that the appellant was the ringleader and controller of the conspiracy and in those circumstances he was entitled to infer that the others were acting in accordance with his instructions, receiving proceeds of sale on behalf of the conspirators as a whole before retaining for themselves such amounts as had been agreed with the appellant …."
"A defendant is not to be convicted of any offence with which he is charged unless and until his guilt is proved. Such guilt may be proved by his own admission or (on indictment) by the verdict of a jury. He may be sentenced only for an offence proved against him (by admission or verdict) or which he has admitted and asked the court to take into consideration when passing sentence …. If, as we think, these are basic principles underlying the administration of the criminal law, it is not easy to see how a defendant can lawfully be punished for offences for which he has not been indicted and which he has denied or declined to admit."
"We entertain reservations whether the full ambit of the principle in R v Canavan, which was concerned with the process of establishing guilt, applies to the assessment of dangerousness for the purposes of s.229. What R v Farrar, consistently with R v Canavan, prohibits is the introduction of a hybrid arrangement into the criminal justice system, in effect the possibility of conviction, or effective conviction, of a serious criminal offence after trial by judge alone in the course of a sentencing decision. The court was concerned that s.229 should not be construed so as to allow the defendant to be deprived of his right to trial by jury, or in some way or other be fixed with the consequences of guilt of a criminal offence without due process. A Newton hearing is not an acceptable form of trial for a criminal offence. It is after all a precondition to the Newton hearing that guilt of the offence is admitted by the defendant. It is therefore inappropriate to embark on a Newton hearing to decide whether or not the defendant has committed a discrete, but similar offence to those already before the court, solely for the purpose of making the assessment of dangerousness.
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In our judgment what R v Farrar clearly did not decide is that, absent a conviction, the court making the s.229 decision is precluded from considering evidence of previous misconduct which would amount to a criminal offence. Arguments advanced on the basis that it did so decide are ill-founded. The contrary is true, and in R v Farrar the end result was that material directly related to the earlier incident did in fact contribute to the conclusion that Farrar himself should properly be assessed as dangerous. For this purpose no conviction is necessary …."
Conclusion