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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 >> Refson v Revenue and Customs [2008] EWHC 1759 (Ch) (18 June 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/1759.html Cite as: [2009] STC 64, [2009] BTC 195, [2008] EWHC 1759 (Ch), [2008] STI 1569 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ELLIOT REFSON | Appellant | |
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COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS | Respondent |
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PO Box 1336 Kingston-Upon-Thames Surrey KT1 1QT
Tel No: 020 8974 7300 Fax No: 020 8974 7301
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr T Buley appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
JUDGE PELLING QC:
"6.1 The appellant contacted the respondents to enquire about the tax treatment of his renting a property in London, travel expenses between Cheshire and London and expenses incurred in New York. The appellant was informed that, provided the expenses were reasonable, he would be able to claim them in relation to both sets of travel. The appellant accordingly claimed relief for this expenditure.
6.2 Had the appellant known that he would have had a more favourable tax treatment in the US, he would have elected to be resident there.
6.3 Although the appellant accepted that he had not produced documentary evidence in support of his travel expenses of £7,500, for each of 2002/2003 and 2003/2004 tax years, this was in any event a conservative estimate.
6.4 In the event, the appellant was informed that the expenses would not be allowed for tax purposes, and the appellant's case is that it is unreasonable for the respondents to, effectively, renege on what had previously been agreed between the parties."
"The respondents contended that:
7.1 They had no record of the alleged telephone conversation during which the appellant was told that his travelling expenses would be allowed as long as they were reasonable. The appellant has not produced any evidence to corroborate that testimony.
7.2 The appellant's claim that his returns for the earlier years were not challenged may well be correct. His return for 1998/1999 contains a deduction of £6,960, which was not taken up for enquiry. This is simply a consequence of the self-assessment regime of, 'process now, check later'. The fact that the respondents failed to enquire into one or more returns containing a possible ineligible expense does not affect their right to enquire into subsequent returns."
"The question of law for the opinion of the High Court is whether or not the appellant is entitled to deduct his expenses of travelling to and staying in London for the year ended 5 April 2002 and for the year ended 5 April 2003 on the grounds that the respondent had not queried similar expenses deducted by the appellant in previous self-assessment returns and that he had purportedly been informed by the respondent that these expenses were deductible."
"I am, however, of opinion that in assessing the meaning, weight and effect reasonably to be given to statements of the Revenue the factual context, including the position of the Revenue itself, is all important. Every ordinarily sophisticated taxpayer knows that the Revenue is a tax-collecting agency, not a tax-imposing authority. The taxpayers' only legitimate expectation is, prima facie, that he will be taxed according to statute, not concession or a wrong view of the law (see R v A-G, ex p Imperial Chemical Industries plc (1986) 60 TC 1 at 64 per Lord Oliver). Such taxpayers would appreciate, if they could not so pithily express, the truth of Walton J's aphorism: 'One should be taxed by law, and not be untaxed by concession' (see Vestey v IRC (No 1) [1977] 3 All ER 1073 at 1098, [1979] Ch 177 at 197). No doubt a statement formally published by the Revenue to the world might safely be regarded as binding, subject to its terms, in any case falling clearly within them. But where the approach to the Revenue is of a less formal nature a more detailed inquiry is, in my view, necessary. If it is to be successfully said that as a result of such an approach the Revenue has agreed to forgo, or has represented that it will forgo, tax which might arguably be payable on a proper construction of the relevant legislation it would, in my judgment, be ordinarily necessary for the taxpayer to show that certain conditions had been fulfilled. I say 'ordinarily' to allow for the exceptional case where different rules might be appropriate, but the necessity in my view exists here. First, it is necessary that the taxpayer should have put all his cards face upwards on the table. This means that he must give full details of the specific transaction on which he seeks the Revenue's ruling, unless it is the same as an earlier transaction on which a ruling has already been given. It means that he must indicate to the Revenue the ruling sought. It is one thing to ask an official of the Revenue whether he shares the taxpayer's view of a legislative provision, quite another to ask whether the Revenue will forgo any claim to tax on any other basis. It means that the taxpayer must make plain that a fully considered ruling is sought. It means, I think, that the taxpayer should indicate the use he intends to make of any ruling given. This is not because the Revenue would wish to favour one class of taxpayers at the expense of another but because knowledge that a ruling is to be publicised in a large and important market could affect the person by whom and the level at which a problem is considered and, indeed, whether it is appropriate to give a ruling at all. Second, it is necessary that the ruling or statement relied on should be clear, unambiguous and devoid of relevant qualification.
In so stating these requirements I do not, I hope, diminish or emasculate the valuable developing doctrine of legitimate expectation. If a public authority so conducts itself as to create a legitimate expectation that a certain course will be followed it would often be unfair if the authority were permitted to follow a different course to the detriment of one who entertained the expectation, particularly if he acted on it. If in private law a body would be in breach of contract in so acting or estopped from so acting a public authority should generally be in no better position. The doctrine of legitimate expectation is rooted in fairness. But fairness is not a one-way street. It imports the notion of equitableness, of fair and open dealing, to which the authority is as much entitled as the citizen. The Revenue's discretion, while it exists, is limited. Fairness requires that its exercise should be on a basis of full disclosure. Counsel for the applicants accepted that it would not be reasonable for a representee to rely on an unclear or equivocal representation. Nor, I think, on facts such as the present, would it be fair to hold the Revenue bound by anything less than a clear, unambiguous and unqualified representation."
"In my judgment, if a case is to be made to the effect that an extra-statutory concession ought to apply in the instant case, that challenge would have to be made by way of judicial review."
"Mr Faulkner's primary submission is that the tribunal did not have jurisdiction to consider legitimate expectation.In support of this, he cited my decision in Marks v McNally [2004] Simons Tax Cases SCD503, [2004] UKSPC SPC00428, in which I said at paragraph 47:
"And if it were appropriate for the appellant to raise the question of legitimate expectation, this could only be done through the courts, rather than through this tribunal."
Nothing put to me, in the course of the present case, gives me any reason to depart from that view.
"Mr Hayward's evidence might show a legitimate expectation that a certain practice would be followed, but if it did show that, the issue would be one for judicial review alone."
In support of that he cited the observations of Sir Richard Scott, Vice Chancellor, in Steibelt v Paling[1999] Simon Tax Cases 594, [1999] STC 594, at 602 to 603; Jonathan Parker J (as he then was) in Hatt v Newman (see above) and Leggett LJ, in Koenigsberger v Mellor [1995] Simon Tax Cases 547, at 553 to 554. These principles are too well known for it to be useful for me to enter into any discussion of them here and, indeed, they were not contested by the appellant. Thus it seems to me that this appeal cannot succeed by reference to the one issue which the appellant wishes to have decided.
"In addition, the solicitor's office would respectfully ask you to consider the following observations:
Question of law for the opinion of the High Court:
We will argue that the Commissioners for the General Purposes of Income Tax for the Division of Finsbury & Hornsey must reject Mr Refson's request to state a case for the opinion of the High Court on the grounds that he has not raised any point of law, as required by regulation 20 of the General Commissioners (Jurisdiction and Procedure) Regulations 1994."
"Mr Refson's second contention before the Commissioners, which is apparent from some of the documents you have listed in paragraph 4 of the draft case, was that he was entitled to deduct these expenses simply because HMRC did not query deductions of earlier years.
The Commissioners were clearly not persuaded by these fact-based arguments. According to the inspectors' note:
'The Commissioners advised that they had considered what Mr Refson had said but had to abide by the law and the tax cases that had been put before them by Mrs Newham'.
You issued a notice of determination after the Commissioners' final determination on 3 November 2006. Mr Refson endorsed the following note on a copy of the notice which is returned to you: 'Dear Mr Gordon Smith, it is my intention to appeal, on the basis of supporting my claim that in an earlier year my expenses claim had been allowed therefore validating the basis of my claim. In support of this I enclose my 2002/2003 PAYE notice. Regards'. In your reply dated 30 November 2006, you specifically asked him to identify the point of law which he was relying on. On 4 December 2006 he replied as follows:
'The point of law on which I intend to rely is the precedent for expenses set in the previous tax year to those in question where allowances were given for my claimed expenses which substantiated that they were allowed and therefore my claim questioned by the Revenue. You currently hold this document. My original claim was erroneously based on the consistency of the Revenue. This appeal relates to the legal underpinning of my appeal, which can now be substantiated'."
"We will argue that Mr Refson's request should be rejected because he has not identified any point of law. His argument that previously unchallenged but erroneous self assessments set a precedent binding on HMRC is clearly in the realm of fact and degree. He cannot reopen it in the High Court after the Commissioners have resolved it against him. To paraphrase Wilberforce LJ in Cole Bros Limited v Phillips:
'If one asks what is the principle of law which they can be said to have violated, it is impossible to state it, unless by an assertion that no reasonable body of commissioners could have come to the conclusion that they reached."
The letter then proceeded to deal with a number of factual issues, which I need not burden this judgment with.