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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> CCA Distribution Ltd v Revenue And Customs [2017] EWCA Civ 1899 (23 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1899.html Cite as: [2017] BVC 60, [2017] EWCA Civ 1899, [2017] STI 2684, [2018] STC 206 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(TAX AND CHANCERY CHAMBER)
(Mr JUSTICE MORGAN and JUDGE TIMOTHY HERRINGTON)
[2015] UKUT 0513 (TT)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS
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CCA DISTRIBUTION LIMITED (in administration) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondent |
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Jeremy Benson QC, Christopher Kerr and Ben Hayhurst (instructed by The General Counsel and Solicitor to HM Revenue and Customs) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 12 July 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice David Richards:
Introduction
Ground 3: the criminal investigation
"The same was true when it came to the question of the rationality of trading patterns now apparent – for example, CCA's main suppliers also selling direct to CCA's EU customers (of which Mr Trees was unaware), or the customers not cutting CCA out as they could have done. The case was very properly put to Mr Trees that these and suchlike factors indicated a contrived pattern of trade designed to suit a non-commercial purpose. The responses Mr Trees made included the assertion that he did not spend time speculating idly about possible other trade patterns that might be taking place, but that he just got on with buying and selling when the opportunity was there. My impression was of a businessman who was essentially pragmatic in his approach to situations and not given to theorising about how the markets could most efficiently operate knowing that they frequently do not do so, and being unable to know of course what other factors – commercial or otherwise – might or might not be at work."
"Nor can it be irrelevant that the criminal investigation begun on 1 June 2006, leading as it did to trials and convictions of one of CCA's main trading partners, paid no attention to Mr Trees, to the point of even taking a formal witness statement from him. The conspiracy encircling CCA's trading was, as Mr Birchfield put it, a very large scheme in which it was possible for an innocent party to be caught up. It is quite credible that traders who had built up the trust of CCA over several years by offering them advantageous trading terms should have seen the company as a useful cog in their machinery – and one which, if things went wrong, would be exposed to risk on its own account alone while leaving the conspirators holding the profits of the fraud."
"The relevance of the criminal investigation and subsequent proceedings is seen by the tribunal as being that if, as was the commissioners' primary submission, Mr Trees had actual knowledge that he was collaborating in a fraud on the Revenue it would be probable that in the investigation he would at least be examined as a possible co-conspirator with those with whom he traded and who were themselves later charged and convicted."
"80. It is clear that when the Judge came to his overall conclusion in relation to the question whether Mr Trees knew that the CCA transactions were connected with fraud, he took into account the matters referred to in the first sentence of [392] as a relevant consideration. The contrary was not argued before us. HMRC submits that those matters were irrelevant to the question of Mr Trees' knowledge. CCA submits that these matters were relevant and the Judge was entitled to take them into account and give them the weight which he thought fit.
81. We agree with HMRC on this point. The matters referred to in the first sentence of [392] were irrelevant to the question whether Mr Trees knew that the CCA transactions were connected with fraud. What the Judge seemed to be saying was: (1) the persons responsible for the criminal investigation must have thought that CCA was not involved in the fraud which they were investigating; and (2) that indicated that Mr Trees did not know that the CCA transactions were connected with fraud. We consider that it is not possible to draw any inference as to what those persons actually thought about the involvement of Mr Trees and CCA from the fact that they did not contact Mr Trees in connection with the criminal investigations. There are many possible reasons why they did not contact Mr Trees, apart from the suggested reason. But even if it were appropriate to infer that those persons actually thought that Mr Trees did not know of the relevant fraud, the belief of those persons has no probative value as to what Mr Trees did know. The Judge was required to determine on the evidence before the F-tT whether it had been demonstrated on the balance of probabilities that Mr Trees knew that the CCA transactions were connected with fraud. What other people thought at an earlier time, probably by reference to material which was different from the evidence before the F-tT, was irrelevant.
82. We therefore conclude that HMRC has established that the Judge took into account an irrelevant consideration. The question as to Mr Trees' knowledge was one of the central questions to be determined by the Judge. At [387], the F-tT stated that the case was a borderline case. In determining a central question in a borderline case, the Judge took into account, in favour of Mr Trees and CCA, an irrelevant matter.
83. HMRC submitted that this irrelevant matter was considered by the Judge to be highly material. While CCA accepted that the Judge regarded this matter as relevant, it submitted that it had not been demonstrated that the Judge regarded it as highly material. We have no way of knowing what precise weight the Judge gave to this matter. He plainly gave it some weight. In a borderline case, a matter which has some weight is capable of affecting the outcome.
84. We consider that, on this ground alone, the Decision as to Mr Trees' knowledge cannot stand. We will consider at the end of our decision, when we have assessed the other grounds of appeal, what should now be done"
Ground 5: (i) circumstantial evidence
"Many of the practices and patterns of trade revealed by the evidence seem to require explanation: the buying and selling of large quantities of goods with little or no subsidiary detail in regard to them; the apparently formulaic nature of the trading in the UK to UK deals; the standard margins of profit in such deals; the substantial absence of written terms of business; the payment of monies decoupled from the passing of title; the use of the UK as a trading hub for intra-European continental trade; the use of sterling as the currency in the case of all the export trades; the course of trading between the same parties; the peak in trade volumes in 2006, and so on."
"In the circumstances, we cannot regard any of the peculiar features just described as inevitably pointing to uncommercial trading or as clear indicators of bad faith. They may so do, but it has not been shown that the probability is that they do so point and the only firsthand evidence of the way this market works is that of the appellant himself."
"411 Having regard to all these considerations, neither of the two circumstances required by the authorities to be present has been established on the balance of probabilities in relation to the transactions under appeal and the appeal must therefore succeed."
"I see Mr Birchfield's banking analysis of six transactions (which are not those in this appeal) as inconclusive, capable of more than one explanation and as establishing, in so far as CCA's involvement is concerned, no more than a prima facie case requiring further investigation. That is not to deny that the evidence from the FCIB statements is suggestive of uncommercial behaviour overall or to deny that it is consistent with a large scheme of organised fraud potentially involving several parties. It is not, however, sufficient to demonstrate on the balance of probabilities that CCA were knowingly participating; to my mind, it only shows the probability that some or all CCA's partners were themselves implicated."
"However the very close, not to say bothersome, attention which Mr D'Rozario paid to CCA's trading and the routine checking of the circumstances of the transactions which he put in hand, are an additional reason why Mr Trees should not be taken as seeing as the only reasonable explanation for the circumstances of the transactions being concluded was that they were connected with fraud. If HMRC, who had much more information about the surrounding circumstances at their disposal, were checking the deals and releasing repayments of input tax after doing so, how could CCA nonetheless have concluded that the only reasonable explanation for them was that they were connected with fraud?"
"We have hesitated before reaching the above conclusions as to the Judge's treatment of the circumstantial evidence. We should not be over ready to subject the Decision to a detailed syntactical analysis. Nonetheless, having attempted to read the Decision in a fair and realistic way, we do reach the conclusion that the Judge erred in law in his handling of the circumstantial evidence in this case. Given that the Judge regarded the case as a borderline one, it was very important for him to approach the circumstantial evidence in the correct way and find that he failed to do so."
Ground 5: (ii) insufficient reasons
"394. HMRC's officers all agreed that CCA could not have verified the transactions upstream and downstream of its own [sic]. Mr Kerr has nonetheless put forward a list (at paragraph 354 above) of some 20 grounds on which Mr Trees should have known that there was no reasonable explanation for his transactions other than a connection to fraud. These concerns relate essentially to the pattern and manner of CCA's trading in regard to which it has been indicated that the expert evidence about the market is conflicting; features which appear to the outside observer as unusual – the types of trade, the peaks in volumes, the apparently incestuous character of dealings, and so on – may on Mr Attenborough's evidence be consistent with the peculiarities of a specialised wholesale market, especially during the boom years of the economy.
395 I do not see therefore an adequate basis on which to support the conclusion that a bona fide trader, taking reasonable precautions and being of normal prudence, should have realised that his transactions were connected to fraud. That the transactions might have been so connected, could well be argued and on that basis I might be persuaded; but that is in itself insufficient to lose the appellant its right to deduct input tax."
Ground 8: the banking evidence
Conclusion
Lady Justice Arden: