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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom VAT & Duties Tribunals Decisions >> Synectiv Ltd v Revenue & Customs [2006] UKVAT V19698 (23 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKVAT/2006/V19698.html Cite as: [2006] UKVAT V19698 |
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19698
PRACTICE – proposed amendment to Statement of Case following the ECJ judgment in Bond House – whether amendment allowed – yes
LONDON TRIBUNAL CENTRE
SYNECTIV LIMITED Appellant
- and -
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S
REVENUE AND CUSTOMS Respondents
Tribunal: DR JOHN F AVERY JONES CBE (Chairman)
Sitting in public in London on 18 May 2006
Michael Patchett-Joyce, counsel, instructed by Pannone, for the Appellant
Rupert Anderson QC and Alan Bates, counsel, instructed by the Acting Solicitor for HM Revenue and Customs, for the Respondents
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2006
DECISION
Failure to comply with Directions
(1) Customs having applied for an extension of time to serve its Statement of Case and List of Documents until 14 October 2005. The Appellant having on 13 October 2005 applied for a Direction that the appeal should be allowed if Customs did not serve them by 21 October 2005, Customs failed to comply with the 14 October 2005 deadline for which they had asked. However, on 19 October 2005 Customs applied for a stand-over until after the ECJ judgment in Bond House.
(2) The Tribunal directed Customs to serve a draft revised Statement of Case and List of Documents by Friday 24 March 2006 and a skeleton argument by 29 March 2006. These were not served until Tuesday 28 March 2006.
Amendment of Statement of Case
(1) The disputed decisions were wrong in law and are unsustainable. Customs need to abandon the disputed decisions and make new ones.
(2) The test for whether Customs should be allowed to amend their Statement of Case is that in Fraser v Oystertec [2004] EWHC 2225 (Ch):
"25. The second principle is that the court ought not to give permission to amend if the claim has no real prospect of succeeding, and in particular if the claim is untruthful or fanciful or is unsupported by evidence and is put forward in the hope that something may turn up on disclosure or trial.
Here Customs have no real prospect of succeeding on their draft revised Statement of Case and it is legally embarrassing.
(3) The amended Statement of Case should identify the transaction that is said to be vitiated by fraud; why that transaction is vitiated by fraud; and plead the facts and matters on which Customs intend to rely to establish that the Appellant knew or had the means to know that the transaction so identified was vitiated by fraud. He accepts that the pleading about the missing trader satisfies the first two, but there is nothing that satisfies the third point.
(4) Customs' skeleton for the hearing on 31 March 2006 submits that the Appellant had actual knowledge that it was taking part in transactions chains which further the purposes of persons wishing to commit frauds on the public revenue. However in their skeleton for this hearing they say that Customs are not required to prove fraud on the part of the Appellants. If they are pleading fraud then it must be properly pleaded.
(5) In a number of respects the draft revised Statement of Case does not show the facts and matters relied on to show knowledge or means of knowledge; it makes reference to transactions other than the specified transactions which are not capable of being similar fact evidence; it states that the fraud was dependent on each party acting as the "ringmaster" of the scheme intended without identifying the ringmaster, his intention, how his intention was communicated and how each party acted in accordance with such intention; or contains nothing more substantial than surmise and conjecture.
(6) So far as documents obtained from the freight forwarder Hawk Logistics Limited are concerned, Crane J in R v Uddin (Southwark Crown Court, 24 June 2005) in staying the prosecution recorded that Counsel for the Crown stated:
"…we are not relying on the documentation to show the truth of anything merely to show that there was such documentation and that, on the face of it, it created a chain of documentation."
Customs' case here relies extensively on Hawk documents. In the same proceedings doubts were also raised about Mobile World GmbH, which appears in a number of the transactions in issue here, on the basis of telephone surveillance by the German authorities which was said by the Judge to show that Hawk employees and Mobile World were collaborating in carousel fraud.
(7) The draft relies on transcripts of lawful covert surveillance at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Manchester on 2 to 4 November 2001 which are described as MTIC fraud planning discussions, which cannot be evidence of knowledge relating to transactions between July and August 2001.
(1) The Appellant is effectively seeking a strike-out, but it is clear from Barrett v Enfield LBC [2001] 2 AC 550 at 557 per Lord Browne-Wilkinson, that it is not appropriate to strike out where there is developing jurisprudence which requires novel points of law to be decided on actual findings of fact.
(2) It is accepted that the disputed decisions were made on the wrong legal basis but subject to producing evidence of "knowledge or the means of knowledge" the decisions would still be correct.
Reasons for the decision
"51 It follows that transactions such as those at issue in the main proceedings, which are not themselves vitiated by VAT fraud, constitute supplies of goods or services effected by a taxable person acting as such and an economic activity within the meaning of Articles 2(1), 4 and 5(1) of the Sixth Directive, where they fulfil the objective criteria on which the definitions of those terms are based, regardless of the intention of a trader other than the taxable person concerned involved in the same chain of supply and/or the possible fraudulent nature of another transaction in the chain, prior or subsequent to the transaction carried out by that taxable person, of which that taxable person had no knowledge and no means of knowledge.
52 Nor can the right to deduct input VAT of a taxable person who carries out such transactions be affected by the fact that in the chain of supply of which those transactions form part another prior or subsequent transaction is vitiated by VAT fraud, without that taxable person knowing or having any means of knowing."
It follows that Customs must now show that the relevant transactions formed part of a chain of transactions one or more of which (whether earlier or later) was "vitiated by fraud" and the Appellant had "knowledge or the means of knowledge" of that fact.
"50. Networks in which one of the parties involved does not pay back to the tax authorities the VAT which he passes on, and the other party deducts it, involve an abuse of a right, because a statutory provision (article 17 of the Sixth Directive) is used to obtain an advantage which is contrary to its purpose, and a transaction has been carried out outside normal trading conditions, in order to gain an undue financial advantage."
The Advocate General therefore analyses the relevance of knowledge or the means of knowledge as being that a person with such knowledge is abusing the right to repayment of the input tax. This analysis may or may not be upheld by the ECJ.
JOHN F AVERY JONES
CHAIRMAN
RELEASE DATE: 23 May 2006
LON/2004/0007