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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Revenue & Customs v Church of Scientology Religious Education College Inc [2007] EWHC 1329 (Ch) (08 June 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/1329.html Cite as: [2007] STC 1196, [2007] BTC 5796, [2007] BVC 743, [2007] EWHC 1329 (Ch), [2007] STI 1690 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPEAL FROM THE VAT AND DUTIES TRIBUNAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
COMMISSIONERS FOR HM REVENUE & CUSTOMS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY RELIGIOUS EDUCATION COLLEGE INC. |
Respondent |
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Mr Kevin Prosser QC & Mr Rupert Baldry (instructed by Hodkin & Co) for the Respondent
Hearing dates:25th May 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Morgan :
Introduction
A summary of the case for HMRC
A summary of the case for the College
The issues before the Tribunal
"We have discussed this matter with our clients' counsel, and he informs us that the Tribunal does have the power to supplement its decision to add an item that may have been overlooked."
Finally, the College's solicitors stated that they had sent a copy of the letter of 26th July 2006 to HMRC.
"[Paragraph 24 of this decision was omitted from the decision when first released. It is added under the authority of rule 30 (6) of the Value Added Tax Tribunal Rules 1986.]"
"Following the discovery of missing paragraph 24, the Tribunal has now issued an amended Decision which is enclosed herewith for substitution. I apologise for any inconvenience caused."
"It was necessary for the Commissioners to await the new decision before appealing. If they had lost on the facts ( … [on the additional point]…, contrary to the Tribunal's findings at paragraph 24 of the new decision), there would have been no purpose in the Commissioners' appealing on the Fleming issue."
"The Church knew that the litigation was ended and they borrowed monies to acquire two new Church properties, in Windmill Hills, Gateshead and Chester Road, Manchester at a combined cost of more than £5,000,000 million. Contracts were exchanged on 2nd and 9th March 2007 respectively. Mr Angius [of the College] informs me that they were able to borrow this money because they knew that HMRC had not appealed the decision, and that therefore they were assured to receive the repayment in the near future. He informs me that these properties would not have been acquired if HMRC had appealed the decision."
Which is the relevant decision?
Should there be an extension of time?
"Interest in the closure of litigation is not only the interest of the public. Successful claimants also have an interest in finality and they are entitled to expect that if they have won at trial, and the time for appeal has passed, that that is the end of the matter. It is now well established that in considering whether to extend time in any case of any complexity the Court should have regard to the overriding objective in CPR 1.1 and also to the checklist in CPR 3.9…."
"This case is, if I may say so, an object lesson in the need for prospective appellants to bear in mind that (a) an extension of time for permission to appeal is discretionary and (b) that the court in granting an extension has to balance the interests of the appellants against the interests of the other parties and the interest of the public."
"(1) that it is a fundamental principle of our common law that the outcome of litigation should be final;
(2) that the law exceptionally allows appeals out of time;
(3) that this, and the other exception mentioned in that passage, are the exception to a general rule of high public importance and reserved for rare and limited cases where the facts justifying the exception can be strictly proved".
He added at paragraph 55:
"…… in interpreting CPR 3.9 in any case where an extension of time for appealing in excess of say of two months is being sought, the Court will bear in mind the matters to which I have referred ….. in determining where the interests of the administration of justice truly lie".
"an application for relief must be supported by evidence".
"whether the application for relief has been made promptly".
In my judgment, an Appellant's Notice filed on 30th March 2007 in relation to a decision of 21st July 2006 was not prompt. Further, even when HMRC became aware of the September decision on 2nd February 2007, they took the full 56 days before filing a very straight forward Appellant's Notice taking the Fleming point, which is a point that had been identified for a considerable period as the point they would wish to take, if they appealed. The period between 2nd February 2007 and 30th March 2007 itself meant that the application was not made promptly.
"whether the failure to comply was intentional".
And paragraph (d) asks:
"whether there is a good explanation for the failure".
I will take these two paragraphs together. The failure to appeal the July decision was intentional in that it did not come about as a result of an accident or a mistake. As I have already indicated, although rule 3.9 (2) states that an application for relief must be supported by evidence and Brooke LJ in Smith v Brough referred to the grounds being "strictly proved", there is no evidence offering an explanation as to HMRC's thinking from 21st July 2006 onwards. If, as Mr Collins suggests on their behalf, they were waiting to see what the Tribunal said on the additional point, they had no reason to think that they were entitled to disregard the 56 day time limit on that account. They do not appear to have made any effort to comply with the 56 day time limit. They cannot say that the terms of the September 2006 decision confused them because, on their evidence, they did not see that decision until the 2nd February 2007. Even if they were confused on the 2nd February 2007 and even if they thought that Mr Hodkin was right when he wrote on 23rd March 2007 that they had further time for appeal from the date of the September decision, Mr Hodkin did not make that comment until 23rd March 2007 by which time there had been very significant delay following 21st July 2006. In this way, in my judgment, the absence of a proper explanation or justification for the delay weighs heavily against HMRC on this application.