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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 and Customs v Khawaja [2008] EWHC 1687 (Ch) (17 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/1687.html Cite as: [2008] STI 1748, [2008] STC 2880, [2009] Bus LR 134, [2009] 1 WLR 398, [2008] EWHC 1687 (Ch), [2009] WLR 398 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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TAHIR IQBAL KHAWAJA |
Respondent |
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MR. T. HIRST for the Respondent.
Hearing dates: 10th and 11th July 2008.
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Introduction
The factual background
"negligently submitting incorrect returns under s.8 of that Act for the years [referred to above]."
The total of the penalties was £41,332, ranging from £2,084 in 1993/94 to £12,865 in 1998/99. Mr Khawaja then appealed that to the General Commissioners, resulting in the decision which is subject to this appeal. The Commissioners heard evidence and submissions and allowed the appeal in part. The Case Stated records their decision as follows:
"9.1 The penalty determination notice dated 17th November 2004 is valid.
9.2 Applying the standard of proof beyond reasonable doubt, the Appellant has demonstrated that the Respondent negligently understated income in respect of the property and benefits in kind from his returns for the tax years in question.
9.3 Applying the standard of proof beyond reasonable doubt, the Appellant has not demonstrated that the Respondent negligently understated income in respect of remuneration from the restaurant for the tax years in question."
They reduced the penalties to sums ranging from £900 in the first of the years in question to £1,200 in the last of them.
"On the facts we are satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that there was negligent submission of incorrect returns for the years mentioned above in respect of property income, but applying the same standard of proof we find that HMRC have failed to prove beyond reasonable doubt that there were understated profits."
The basis of this appeal
The determination of the issues
"I think that the time has come to say, once and for all, that there is only one civil standard of proof and that is proof that the fact in issue more probably occurred than not."
He referred to a confusion which might have arisen in the cases to the effect that this standard of proof might vary:
"5. Some confusion has however been caused by dicta which suggest that the standard of proof may vary with the gravity of the misconduct alleged or even of the seriousness of the consequences for the person concerned. The cases in which such statements have been made fall into three categories. First there are cases in which the court has for one purpose classified the proceedings as civil (for example, for the purposes of Article 6 of the European Convention), but nevertheless thought that, because of the serious consequences of the proceedings, the criminal standard of proof or something like it should be applied. Secondly, there are cases in which it has been observed that when some event is inherently improbable, strong evidence may be needed to persuade a Tribunal that it more probably happened than not. Thirdly, there are cases in which judges are simply confused about whether they are talking about the standard of proof or about the role of inherent probabilities in deciding whether the burden of proving a fact to a given standard has been discharged."
It was in that context that he said what I have quoted him as having said in paragraph 13. He went on in paragraph 13 to agree with Lord Steyn in R (McCann) v Crown Court at Manchester [2003] 1 AC 787 to the effect that:
"Clarity would be greatly enhanced if the courts said simply that although proceedings [in the first category] were civil, the nature of the particular issue involved make it appropriate to apply the criminal standard."
"69. There are some proceedings, though civil in form, whose nature is such that it is appropriate to apply the criminal standard of proof. Divorce proceedings in the olden days of the matrimonial 'offence' may have been another example… But care proceedings are not of that nature. They are not there to punish or deter anyone. The consequences of breaking a care order are not penal. Care proceedings are there to protect a child from harm. The consequences for the child of getting it wrong are equally serious either way.
70. My Lords, for that reason I would go further and announce loud and clear that the standard of proof in finding the facts necessary to establish the threshold under s.31(2) or the welfare considerations in s.1 of the 1989 Act is the simple balance of probabilities, neither more nor less. Neither the seriousness of the allegation nor the seriousness of the consequences should make any difference to the standard of proof to be applied in determining the facts. The inherent probabilities are simply something to be taken into account, where relevant, in deciding where the truth lies."
"47….. [the serious adverse consequences of a decision] goes to the standard of proof to be applied in the first place. It is because of the serious consequences of criminal convictions or adverse disciplinary findings that the criminal standard of proof – proof beyond reasonable doubt – is required in those cases."
He then refers to a number of what he called "quasi-criminal cases":
"B v the Chief Constable of the Avon and Somerset Constabulary [2001] 1 WLR 340, a Divisional Court decision concerning the making of sex-offender orders; Gough v the Chief Constable of the Derbyshire Constabulary [2002] QB 1213, a decision of the Court of Appeal regarding the making of football banning orders; and R (on the application of McCann) v The Crown Court of Manchester [2003] 1 A 787, a decision of Your Lordships' House on the making of anti-social behaviour orders…..Given, however, the conclusion in those cases that the standard of proof there being set was 'for all practical purposes indistinguishable from the criminal standard' (…in B, 'An exacting standard of proof….in practice…hard to distinguish from the criminal standard'; in Gough 'virtually indistinguishable' from the criminal standard so that 'pragmatism dictates that the task of magistrates should be made more straightforward by ruling that they must in all cases…apply the criminal standard' (Lord Steyn at para 37 in McCann…)) I question whether it would not have been more logical and appropriate to have decided that the making of the various orders calls for the criminal standard of proof to be satisfied in the first place."
"95(1) Where a person fraudulently or negligently –
(a) delivers any incorrect return of a kind mentioned in s.8 or s.8A of this Act….or
(b) makes any incorrect return, statement or declaration in connection with any claim for an allowance, deduction or relief in respect of income tax or capital gains tax; or
(c) submits to an inspector of the Board or any Commissioners any incorrect accounts in connection with the ascertainment of his liability to income tax or capital gains tax
he shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding the amount of the difference specified in subsection (2) below."
The amount specified is, in essence, the amount of the unpaid tax. There is nothing express in that section, or indeed anywhere else in the Act, which makes it clear what the standard of proof is on any challenge to an assessment to such a penalty; nor does there appear to be anything implicit elsewhere in the Act. To that extent, as will appear later, the income tax legislation differs from the VAT legislation. Accordingly, having said that the Act provides a starting point, it does not help very much. The matter must be decided using principles acquired from elsewhere.
"37. Having concluded that the relevant proceedings are civil, in principle it follows that the standard of proof ordinarily applicable in civil proceedings, namely the balance of probabilities, should apply."
That sets out a useful jumping off point for the analysis. Are the proceedings in cases such as the present civil, as opposed to criminal? In my view there can be no doubt about that. They are civil. They are in complete distinction to parallel criminal proceedings which can be brought for fraudulent tax evasion, and they cover ground (negligence) which could never sensibly be the subject of criminal proceedings in cases such as this. Although the word "penalty" is used, that is far from determinative. The penalties are first raised by a notice issued by HMRC. There are only ever any proceedings if that notice is challenged (as was the case in respect of Mr Khawaja's notice). That is not a criminal-type procedure. This is plainly a procedure allied to a civil recovery procedure. There is nothing criminal about it. That, therefore, gives us the starting point of a presumed civil standard of proof.
"Any person who assists in or induces the making or delivery for any purposes of tax of any return or account which he knows to be incorrect shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding £500."
The Commissioners of Inland Revenue sought to recover a penalty from the defendant in that case. They failed because on the facts it was not established that the accounts which the defendant assisted in drawing were "for any purposes of tax". They were for the purposes of preparing a company's accounts. In the course of his judgment, Lord Jauncey, sitting in the Outer House, said (at page 377):
"Section 99 is one of a number of sections to be found in Part X of the Taxes Management Act 1970 headed 'Penalties etc'. As a penal section it falls to be construed strictly and the proceedings thereunder being of a quasi-criminal nature proof of the facts resulting in liability to a penalty must be beyond reasonable doubt."
That seems to be a plain statement. It is unreasoned, and it is not at all clear from the report that the point was the subject of any argument. What is clear is that the finding was not necessary for his decision. At page 378 he set out some of his findings:
"In the present case there is no doubt that the use for tax purposes of the statutory and detailed accounts was an incidental consequence of the making of the accounts known to the defender, but there is equally no doubt that it was neither the purpose nor a purpose of such making."
He was thus not basing his decision on a failure to come up to the standard of proving the purpose beyond reasonable doubt; he actually found that there was no doubt the other way – in other words, no doubt at all that one of the statutory conditions was not met. There would have been precisely the same result had the standard of proof been the balance of probabilities. In those circumstances, the case is, with respect, of questionable authority.
"I do not find it necessary to express any concluded view as to the observations by Lord Jauncey in Ruffle in the context of applying s.99 of the Taxes Management Act 1970. It is difficult to reconcile what Lord Jauncey said with the views expressed by the Keith committee dealing with the same subject matter."
I will refer below to the Keith committee. Lord Hamilton said:
"I reserve my opinion as to the correctness of the view expressed by Lord Jauncey in Inland Revenue v Ruffle….as to the standard of proof applicable in proceedings under s.99 of the Taxes Management Act 1970. For policy or other reasons his Lordship may not have been afforded a full argument on that aspect of the case."
Lord Johnston said:
"Finally, reference was made both before the Tribunal and before this court to the decision of Lord Jauncey in Inland Revenue v Ruffle…In the context of this case I attach no importance to that decision which in any event seems to me, in regard to the issue of standard of proof, to have proceeded upon a concession or at least without the point being argued. It is sufficient for present purposes to state the obvious, namely that we are concerned with different legislation in a different context."
"The fact that the proceedings are criminal for the purposes of the Human Rights Convention does not mean that the standard of proof in domestic criminal proceedings applies. The standard is the civil standard of the balance of probabilities…."
That, however, is as bold and unreasoned a statement as the statement to the contrary in Ruffle. It is also in the context of a different taxing statute. However, more assistance is obtained from another VAT case, namely Han v Customs and Excise Commissioners [2001] 1 WLR 2253. The principal point in that case was whether the system for VAT penalties meant that that system gave rise to "criminal charges" within Article 6. The Court of Appeal, by a majority, held that it did. In the course of his judgment Potter LJ set out the relevant provision – section 60 of the Value Added Tax Act 1994 (see paragraph 12). At the end of that citation he said:
"(The burden of proof is that applicable to civil proceedings, namely proof on the balance of probabilities: see 1st Indian Cavalry Club Limited v Customs and Excise Commissioners 1998 SC 126)."
Again, it is not apparent that the point was the subject of any argument, but what is significant is that Potter LJ had no apparent difficulty with that proposition in the context of the VAT penalty regime.
"39. The Keith Report noted this position. Such arrangements were contrasted with those available to the Inland Revenue in respect of tax, where civil penalties were provided, both for regulatory matters and with a wide range of offences, such as neglect and fraud, on proof to the civil standard." [my emphasis]
He then quoted various parts of the Keith Report, including the following in paragraph 18.3.7:
"Turning to the question of the introduction of penalties for civil fraud, to run in parallel with and the bringing and compounding of criminal proceedings, Customs and Excise told us that to run the two systems together would undoubtedly give much greater flexibility in dealing with fraud or near fraud. It would afford welcome assistance in dealing with those cases where there were indications of fraud but where it was not possible to obtain proof to the criminal standard. At present those cases finished as simple unpenalised assessments and represented a loss to the Exchequer in delayed receipt of tax and cost of investigation."
At paragraph 43 Potter LJ remarked on the findings of the Keith Report about the difficulties of having to prove penalty cases to the criminal standard:
"43. So far as fraud and dishonesty were concerned, the report noted at p.398 para 18.4.11 that the requirement that fraud had to be provable to the criminal standard before penalties could be exacted meant that many large understatements arising through demonstrable lack of care, but short of fraud, provable to that standard, went unpenalised. It continued, at p.399 – 400 para 18.4.16:
'We have noted…the high resource cost of the investigation of fraud to the criminal standard, and the understandable constraints this imposes on the investigation of the smaller frauds….by comparison, the Inland Revenue offence code providing civil penalties for fraud, buttressed by inducement provisions, allows a "civil" form of investigation and settlement, with the burden of criminal investigation being taken up only in those cases identified from the outset or in their course as sufficiently heinous to justify prosecution. In those cases where "civil" investigation techniques suffice to secure evidence of the true extent of the fraud, the process is an economical one, at least by comparison with the cost of a comparable criminal investigation. The investigation of acts of dishonesty in relation to tax matters in a "civil" style reinforced by inducements, rather than as criminal offences under the Judges' Rules was generally welcome to our witnesses and we heard no consistent body of criticism of the lower civil burden of proof in such cases as being unfair to the tax payer.'" [my emphasis]
"In my opinion, the whole scheme of Part IV is to enact two distinct and separate schemes. In the one, civil proceedings allow the recovery of civil penalties (including surcharges). In the other, persons may be prosecuted for the offence of 'fraudulent evasion of VAT' (see s.72). s.60 falls within the civil regime and thus gives rise to civil proceedings which, in my opinion, attract the civil standard of proof." [my emphasis]
He clearly understood that the Keith Report was recommending a lesser standard of proof than the criminal standard, though he does not quite say so in terms. He says:
"In my opinion, the mischief identified by the Keith Committee, and in respect of which they made recommendations for the introduction of a civil fraud, was the mischief of having to resort to criminal proceedings and sanctions in respect of a whole range of failures by the taxable person to perform his obligations to make due returns or appropriate payments etc. The remedy was to provide a civil regime in respect of liabilities arising from defaults which were less serious, while leaving open the possibility of a prosecution where the conduct was sufficiently serious. This consideration also points in favour of the result arrived at by the Tribunal."
The result arrived at by the Tribunal was to find that the civil standard of proof applied.
"That Report points to the undesirability of penalising defaults through a purely criminal offence code. That mischief is recommended to be cured by the introduction of a code for the recovery of certain penalties by civil process. The Report acknowledges (correctly in my view) that any civil process would carry with it the civil standard of proof."
Again, therefore, albeit in the context of a case dealing with the VAT code, there is a clear reference to the appropriateness of the civil standard, and a clear acknowledgement of the correctness in the Keith Report in assuming that that standard applied in income tax cases.
"….(iii) burden and standard of proof."
In fact, paragraph 78 reveals that counsel for the taxpayer conceded that the civil standard of proof applied, so that particular point was not argued. However, paragraph 9 of his judgment refers back to the judgment of the judge at first instance (Hart J) who himself referred to the Keith Report:
"The genesis of the code is to be found in the 1983 Keith Report. That had reported on the desirability of introducing into the VAT enforcement regime a civil penalty system akin to that available to the Inland Revenue in respect of other taxes…."
There was implicit approval of the statement of Hart J. It equates the two systems.
The effect of Article 6
"88. The classification of a case as criminal for the purposes of article 6(3) of the Convention on Human Rights, using the tests established by the Strasbourg jurisprudence, is a classification for the purposes of the Convention only. It entitles the defendant to the safeguards provided expressly or by implication by that article. It does not make the case criminal for all domestic purposes. In particular, it does not necessarily engage protections such as those provided by the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984. The submissions before us did not address this point or, indeed, the subject of burden of proof (although I note that no objection was even raised to a civil burden in Georgiou's case). As Mr Oliver and Potter LJ have both observed, the precise implications under the Convention of classification of any case as criminal for the purposes of the Convention will have to be worked out on a case by case basis."
I would respectfully venture to suggest that the reference to burden of proof in Mance LJ's judgment should be a reference to standard of proof. If that it is right then it is plain that he did not consider that the classification automatically brought in the criminal standard of proof. The reference to what Potter LJ had said is a reference to his judgment at page 84.
The consequences for this appeal
The cross-appeal
Conclusion