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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 IA Associates Ltd [2013] EWHC 4382 (Ch) (07 November 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/4382.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 4382 (Ch) |
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UPPER TRIBUNAL, TAX & CHANCERY CHAMBER
Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS | Claimant/Respondent | |
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IA ASSOCIATES LIMITED | Defendant/Appellant |
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8th Floor, 165 Fleet Street, London, EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7421 4036 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
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Crown Copyright ©
"An appeal from the FTT to the UT is governed by section 12 of the 2007 Act and lies on a point of law alone. It is settled law that appeals concerning case management decisions should not be interfered with by an appellate court when made by a judge who has, 'applied the correct principles and who has taken into account matters which should be taken into account and left out of account matters which are irrelevant, unless the court is satisfied that the decision is so plainly wrong that it must be regarded as outside the generous ambit of discretion entrusted to the judge'. See, for example, Wallbrook Trustee v Fattal & Ors [2008] EWCA Civ 427 per Lawrence Collins LJ at 33. Before the UT it was for HMRC to demonstrate that the FTT had applied the wrong approach in principle or that in applying the correct approach, the FTT had reached a decision that no Tribunal, properly directed, could have reached on the facts."
"The first question is whether an error of law was identified which enabled the UT to interfere with the FTT's decision."
"The UT adopted the correct approach to the admission of the materials in question. It assessed whether the evidence was relevant and applied the presumption that all relevant evidence should be admitted unless there is a compelling reason to the contrary: Mobile Export 365 Ltd v Commissioners for HMRC [2007] EWHC 2664 (Admin) per Lightman J at [20].
"... the margin accorded to the primary decision-maker in a case management decision, here the FTT, is particularly wide. Ryder LJ has set out the well-known statement of Lawrence Collins LJ (as he then was) in Walbrook Trustee v Fattal and others [2008] EWCA Civ 427 at [33] and has summarised the similar statement in the UT(TCC) by Warren J in Connect Global Ltd v Revenue and Customs Commissioners [2010] UKUT 377 (TCC) at [48] at [18] of his judgment."
"... since the UT may only set aside a decision where it finds that it involved making an error on a point in law, it is incumbent on it to identify the error of law and to do so clearly in its decision. The Upper Tribunal Judge did not, in my judgment do so in this case."
"Norris J, sitting in the UT (TCC), stated (at [23]) that, 'The Upper Tribunal should exercise extreme caution in entertaining appeals on case management issues'. He considered that Lawrence Collins LJ's statement in Walbrook Trustee applied with, 'at least as great, if not greater, force in the tribunals' jurisdiction as it does in the court system'."
"... that judicial restraint should be exercised when the reasons that a tribunal gives for its decision are being examined."
"The appellate court should not assume too readily that the tribunal misdirected itself just because not every step in its reasoning is fully set out in it."
"Because the FTT wrongly considered that the evidence was stale, it did not go on to consider the prejudice to HMRC that would be caused by the exclusion of the prosecution's opening. Thus, if HMRC's application is rejected, it inevitably followed that HMRC would be prejudiced by its exclusion. It follows that the First Tier Tribunal erred in failing to take this consideration into consideration. Case management decisions are reviewable on appeal only in limited circumstances, but, contrary to the appellant's submissions, those circumstances are not limited to perversity. It may include the inclusion or exclusion of relevant considerations. This includes the erroneous evaluation of relevant considerations."
"... that this Court should not interfere with case management decisions made by a judge who has applied the correct principles, and who has taken into account matters which are irrelevant, unless satisfied that the decision is so plainly wrong that it must be regarded as outside the generous ambit of the discretion entrusted to the judge. It is pertinent to have in mind, in the present case, that the judge was well aware of the need for caution when considering whether to direct a trial of issues on assumed facts; and was well aware that there were dangers on the course which he decided to take. The judge appreciated that there was a risk that his decision would lead to delay and wasted costs. If his approach to the evaluation of the risk was correct, I would not think it right to substitute my own view for the conclusion that he reached."
"This test as set out by Chadwick LJ does mean that, whenever a relevant consideration is wrongly excluded, the judge's exercise of discretion must be set aside. In my judgment, this case shows that there needs to be added to that test a requirement that the considerations which were wrongful must, alone or in aggregate, constitute considerations that were material in the exercise of the discretion in question."
"The UT adopted the correct approach to the admission of the materials in question. It assessed whether the evidence was relevant and applied the presumption that all relevant evidence should be admitted unless there is a compelling reason to the contrary."
"The second stage of the enquiry requires the case management judge or the trial judge to make what will often be a very difficult and sometimes a finely balanced judgment: whether evidence or some of it (and if so which parts of it), which ex hypothesi are legally admissible, should be admitted. For the party seeking admission, the argument will always be that justice requires the evidence to be admitted; if it is excluded, a wrong result may be reached. The importance of doing justice in the particular case is a factor the judge will always respect. The strength of the argument for admitting the evidence will always depend primarily on the judge's assessment of the potential significance of the evidence, assuming it to be true, in the context of the case as a whole ... some objections which were likely to occur."
"I have no doubt that Lightman J would not have expressed himself as he did in Mobile Export 365 Ltd if O'Brien had been cited to him. In particular he would not have used the word 'compelling' given the reference at (5) of O'Brien to "what will often be a very difficult and finely balanced judgment."
"Judge Wallace then dealt with the statement of one Mr Stone and that of Mr Fletcher. As to that of the latter he refused the appellant's application to have it excluded from the evidence."
"I am satisfied that it is of some potential relevance to the issues in this appeal both as to whether there were fraudulent defaults regardless of the Appellant's knowledge and if so whether the Appellant had the requisite knowledge."
"Speaking for myself I would not derive great assistance from a generic statement such as this much of which is based on economic theory as to how traders might be expected to behave in the grey market rather than how traders do in fact behave. This is not so much a criticism of Mr Fletcher as a reflection of the fact that trading on the grey market based on online platforms such as IPT is not inherently structured. Traders may well react to price movements without knowing why they occur. This is an inevitable problem in analysing the grey market.
However notwithstanding my own reservations of the value of Mr Fletcher's evidence, I recognise that others may take a different view. This is an important and complex appeal. It is inevitable that the Tribunal will have to consider the grey market if only because the Appellant relies on it. Mr Fletcher's evidence was served in 2009 without any objection until this year. I do not grant the application that it be excluded."
"... that there has been no adequate evidence before us of what was normal commercial practice in this type of trade by a small trader in the grey market. Mr Fletcher's evidence, valuable up to a point, does not on his own admission fill this gap and we are lacking direct evidence except from Mr Purser of the matter." (Mr Purser being a director of the trader in that case)
"Mr Fletcher's evidence tending to the contrary is not convincing because he is not properly an 'expert witness', being through his firm committed to a major manufacturer/distributor in the white market; and his reports are, moreover, lacking direct evidence or experience in trading on the grey market - a market which, in principle, it is not in the interest of his firm's client to encourage. Mr Fletcher's perception of the position is thus necessarily partial."
"We have already, at paragraph 34 above, referred to Mr Fletcher's evidence giving a generic view, with his opinions and conclusions in relation to the grey market in mobile telephones during 2006 rather than dealing with the specific issues and facts of this appeal. Having considered this evidence we find, as did Judge Wallace in Excel RTI Solutions v HMRC, that 'his conclusions seem to us to be a matter for submission by counsel rather than evidence by an expert witness' and, as such, it does not materially assist the Tribunal in the determination of this appeal. For that reason, we find that Mr Fletcher's evidence should be excluded."
"Having considered carefully the redactions to Mr Fletcher's statement suggested by the Appellant, I take a similar view to his evidence as did Judge Wallace."
"However, I do consider the suggested redactions to be such that in fairness to the Appellant in the overall scheme of things they ought to be excluded from the statement, and I direct accordingly. The excluded material is not central to the appeal, and in my judgment does not take any of the force from the remainder of the statement."
"...the tribunal does not need to be burdened with needless consideration, hundreds of pages of the most peripheral relevance. That is a reference to the hundreds of pages of exhibits that I was told by Mr Mandalla and I accept that the redactions only relate to the text of Mr Fletcher's witness statement and will have no impact on the number of pages exhibited which will remain exhibited."
"The appellant's contented generic expert evidence such as this is almost impossible and certainly a very costly task. Of course, there are telecommunications experts who could consider Hawkeye's trading pattern."
"It is hardly fair that the respondent should be permitted to repeatedly serve Mr Fletcher's statement in appeal after appeal when those bringing the appeals have to commission a bespoke response."
"Access to a large pool of labour. To exploit box-breaking successfully, a trader needs access to hundreds of staff to procure handsets and break each handset box on a scale necessary to make material profits."
"Trading in Nokia stock excludes traders from pursuing arbitrage opportunities as Nokia sets homogenous pricing for its customers across all territories. The absence of price differences between these territories fails to meet the basic criteria for arbitrage. As discussed in Sections 4.4.8 to 4.4.12, currency arbitrage is theoretically possible but unlikely to be worthwhile in 2006."
"Nokia is also the only major OEM to set identical prices for its wholesale customers in all geographical markets. Sony Ericson (and other OEMs) does not employ such a practice, giving rise to international 'arbitrage' trading."
"OEMs (with the exception of Nokia) usually differentiate their product-pricing between different geographical markets. Some, such as Samsung, have adopted an explicit policy of differential pricing to help them build market share in certain territories. This will inevitably lead to traders attempting arbitrage trades between low and high price markets. Arbitrage can occur where differential handset-pricing is in place. The distributor takes advantage of this difference by buying handsets in one country and exporting them for sale to countries where they can be sold at a higher price."
"... a volume shortage requires a very specific type of handset to address the market opportunity. Descriptions of handsets are required on order forms and/or invoices. Anything less than the detail shows at Figure 13 would indicate that the transaction is unlikely to be dealing with a volume shortage."
"The RFP is invariably for a small number of very specific handsets in a very specific configuration (models, colour, frequency, etc) that dealers must be able to deliver in a matter of days."
'judicial restraint should be exercised when reasons that a Tribunal gives for its decision are being examined' [and] 'the appellate court should not assume too readily that the Tribunal misdirected itself just because not every step in its reasoning is fully set out in it."
I have great difficulty, notwithstanding that guidance from Lord Hope, as picked up by Lord Justice Beatson in the Atlantic Electronics case, in seeing what it is that formed the unfairness in leaving the negative indicators in the report or in what sense taking the negative indicators out of the report is of any practical utility or benefit either to the appellant IA or to the tribunal or as something that will shorten or make less expensive the resolution of this appeal.