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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 & Customs v Livewire Telecom Ltd [2009] EWHC 15 (Ch) (16 January 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/15.html Cite as: [2009] STC 643, [2009] EWHC 15 (Ch), [2009] STI 190, [2009] BTC 5173, [2009] BVC 172 |
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CH/2008/APP/0252 |
CHANCERY DIVISION
(ON APPEAL FROM THE VAT AND DUTIES TRIBUNAL)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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LIVEWIRE TELECOM LIMITED |
Respondent |
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And Between: |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE & CUSTOMS |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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OLYMPIA TECHNOLOGY LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr David Scorey, Mr Jern-Fei Ng (instructed by Malletts Solicitors) for the First Named Respondent.
Mr. Kieron Beal, Ms Eleni Mitrophanous (instructed by BDO Stoy Hayward) for the Second Named Respondent.
Hearing dates: 15,16,17,18 December 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Lewison:
Introduction
i) In its simplest form it is known as an acquisition fraud. A trader imports goods from another Member State. No VAT is payable on the import. He then sells on those goods to a domestic buyer and charges VAT. He dishonestly fails to account for the VAT to HMRC and disappears. The importer is labelled a "missing trader" or "defaulter".
ii) The next level of sophistication involves both an import and an export. A trader once again imports goods from another Member State. No VAT is payable on the import. Typically the goods are high value low volume goods, such as computer chips or mobile phones. He then sells on those goods to a domestic buyer and charges VAT. He dishonestly fails to account for the VAT to HMRC and disappears. The domestic buyer sells on to an exporter at a price which includes VAT. The exporter exports the goods to another Member State. The export is zero-rated. So the exporter is, in theory, entitled to deduct the VAT that he paid from what would otherwise be his liability to account to HMRC for VAT on his turnover. If he has no output tax to offset against his entitlement to deduct, he is, in theory, entitled to a payment from HMRC. Thus HMRC directly parts with money. Sometimes the exported goods are re-imported and the process begins again. In this variant the fraud is known as a carousel fraud. There may be many intermediaries between the original importer and the ultimate exporter. These intermediaries are known as "buffers". The ultimate exporter is labelled a "broker". A chain of transactions in which one or more of the transactions is dishonest has conveniently been labelled a "dirty chain". Where HMRC investigate and find a dirty chain they refuse to repay the amount reclaimed by the ultimate exporter.
iii) In order to disguise the existence of a dirty chain, fraudsters have become more sophisticated. They have conducted what HMRC call "contra-trading". The trader who would have been the exporter or broker at the end of a dirty chain, with a claim to repayment of input tax, himself imports goods (which may be different kinds of goods) from another Member State. Because this is an import he acquires the goods without having to pay VAT. This is the contra-trade. He sells on the newly acquired goods, charging VAT but this output tax is offset against his input tax, resulting in no payment (or only a small payment) to HMRC. The buyer of the newly acquired goods exports them and reclaims his own input tax from HMRC. Again there may be intermediaries or buffers between the contra-trader and the ultimate exporter. The fraudsters' hope is that if HMRC investigate the chain of transactions culminating in the export, they will find that all VAT has been properly accounted for. This chain of transactions has conveniently been called the "clean chain". Thus the theory is that an investigation of the clean chain will not find out about the dirty chain, with the result that HMRC will pay the reclaim of VAT on the export of the goods which have progressed through the clean chain. I should add that HMRC do not agree with the label "clean chain" because they say that both chains are part of an overall fraudulent scheme.
The domestic legislation
"(1) Subject to the following provisions of this section, 'input tax', in relation to a taxable person, means the following tax, that is to say –
(a) VAT on the supply to him of any goods or services;
(b) VAT on the acquisition by him from another Member State of any goods; and
(c) VAT paid or payable by him on the importation of any goods from a place outside the Member States,
being (in each case) goods or services used or to be used for the purpose of any business carried on or to be carried on by him."
"(2) Subject to the provisions of this section, he is entitled at the end of each prescribed accounting period to credit for so much of his input tax as is allowable under section 26, and then to deduct that amount from any output tax that is due from him.
(3) If either no output tax is due at the end of the period, or the amount of the credit exceeds that of the output tax then, subject to subsections (4) and (5) below, the amount of the credit or, as the case may be, the amount of the excess shall be paid to the taxable person by the Commissioners; and an amount which is due under this subsection is referred to in this Act as a 'VAT credit'.
. . .
(6) A deduction under subsection (2) above and payment of a VAT credit shall not be made or paid except on a claim made in such manner and at such time as may be determined by or under regulations . ."
"(1) The amount of input tax for which a taxable person is entitled to credit at the end of any period shall be so much of the input tax for the period (that is input tax on supplies, acquisitions and importations in the period) as is allowable by or under regulations as being attributable to supplies within subsection (2) below.
(2) The supplies within this subsection are the following supplies made or to be made by the taxable person in the course or furtherance of his business –
(a) taxable supplies;
(b) supplies outside the United Kingdom which would be taxable supplies if made in the United Kingdom."
"Regulations may provide for the zero-rating of supplies of goods, or of such goods as may be specified in the regulations, in cases where:-
(a) The Commissioners are satisfied that the goods have been or are to be exported to a place outside the Member States or that the supply in question involves both -
(i) the removal of the goods from the United Kingdom; and
(ii) their acquisition in another Member State by a person who is liable for VAT on the acquisition in accordance with the provisions of the law of that Member State corresponding, in relation to that Member State, to the provisions of section 10; and
(b) Such other conditions, if any, as may be specified in the regulations or the Commissioners may impose are fulfilled."
"Where the Commissioners are satisfied that —
(a) a supply of goods by a taxable person involves their removal from the United Kingdom,
(b) the supply is to a person taxable in another Member State,
(c) the goods have been removed to another Member State,
(d) the goods are not goods in relation to whose supply the taxable person has opted, pursuant to section 50A of the Act, for VAT to be charged by reference to the profit margin on the supply,
the supply, subject to such conditions as they may impose, shall be zero-rated."
The European dimension
"(2) In so far as the goods and services are used for the purposes of his taxable transactions, the taxable person shall be entitled to deduct from the tax he is liable to pay:
(a) value added tax due or paid within the territory of the country in respect of goods or services supplied or to be supplied to him by another taxable person;
(b) value added tax due or paid in respect of imported goods within the territory of the country. ."
"Member States may impose other obligations which they deem necessary for the correct collection of the tax and for the prevention of evasion, subject to the requirement of equal treatment for domestic transactions and transactions carried out between Member States by taxable persons and provided that such obligations do not, in trade between Member States, give rise to formalities connected with the crossing of frontiers.
The option provided for in the first sub-paragraph cannot be used to impose additional obligations over and above those laid down in paragraph 3."
"Without prejudice to other Community provisions and subject to conditions which they shall lay down for the purpose of ensuring the correct and straightforward application of the exemptions provided for below and preventing any evasion, avoidance or abuse, Member States shall exempt:
(a) supplies of goods [as defined in Article 5] dispatched or transported by or on behalf of the vendor or the person acquiring the goods out of the territory referred to in Article 3 but within the Community, effected for another taxable person or a non-taxable legal person acting as such in a Member State other than that of the departure of the dispatch or transport of the goods."
"where it is ascertained, having regard to objective factors, that the supply is to a taxable person who knew or should have known that, by his purchase, he was participating in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of value added tax, it is for the national court to refuse that taxable person entitlement to the right to deduct."
Change of case on appeal: the principle
"..... a party cannot ..... normally seek to appeal a trial judge's decision on the basis that a claim, which could have been brought before the trial judge, but was not, would have succeeded if it had been brought. The justice of this as [a] general principle is ..... obvious. Parties to litigation are entitled to know where they stand. The parties are entitled, and the court requires, to know what the issues are. Upon this depends a variety of decisions, including, by the parties, what evidence to call, how much effort and money it is appropriate to invest in the case, and generally how to conduct the case; and, by the court, what case management and administrative decisions to make and give, and the substantive decision of the case itself. Litigation should be resolved once and for all, and it is not, generally speaking, just if a party who successfully contested a case advanced on one basis should be expected to face on appeal, not a challenge to the original decision, but a new case advanced on a different basis. There may be exceptional cases in which the court would not apply the general principle which I have expressed."
The case below: Livewire
"[HMRC] rely on three main grounds for averring that the [taxable person] knew or should have known that its transactions were connected to fraud."
"Given all of the above factors, [HMRC] properly concluded that the [taxable person] knew or should have known that the transactions were connected with fraud."
"The [taxable person] knew or ought to have known of that fact."
"… did Livewire actually know of the fraudulent evasions of VAT and of their connexion with the transactions which Livewire had entered into in April 2006? Alternatively should Livewire have known of these matters?"
"Thirdly, and alternatively, have [HMRC] satisfied the Tribunal that Livewire ought to have known of the said fraud ("constructive knowledge sub-issue")."
"The overall scheme to defraud described above can only work if the broker trader in the second chain (i.e. Livewire) is complicit (whether by actually knowing of it or by acting on the instructions of a controlling hand [in which case, at the very least, they ought to have known of it]). The trader in Livewire's position is necessarily complicit because it is only if they achieve a repayment from HMRC that the fraud makes its profit. If the trader was not complicit there would be no way for the spoils of the fraud to be divided between the participants."
"In the end Customs conducted the appeal on the basis that both chains were a fraud in which the Appellant was involved, which must imply knowingly involved." (§ 11)
"Mr Benson [counsel for HMRC] puts forward all the transactions in the dirty and clean chains and asks the Tribunal to conclude that everyone is participating in a fraud, which therefore includes the missing traders and necessarily the contra-traders, Sygnet and Uni-Brand. … He accepts that if the contra-traders are not part of the fraud then it will be extremely unlikely that the Appellant [knew] or ought to have known about the missing traders in the dirty chain, although the question still has to be asked." (§ 16)
"In view of the decision above, the Appellant could not have known of the fraud, which is the fraud by the missing traders in the dirty chains. As Mr Scorey pointed out, "ought to have known" is inconsistent with Customs' case that both chains were part of a fraud, which, if true (which we have found it is not), must mean that the Appellant had actual knowledge. However, we set out the rival contentions and our views." (§ 33)
"Indeed, even if we had found that Sygnet and Uni-Brand were involved in the fraud (which we have not) we would not have decided that the above points showed that Appellant either knew, or had the means of knowledge, of such fraud." (§ 36)
"Accordingly our decision is that the fraud carried out by the missing traders only; that Uni-Brand and Sygnet are not parties to any fraud; and that the Appellant neither knew nor ought to have known about the fraud, and we allow the appeal." (§ 37)
The case below: Olympia
"the Appellant taxpayer "knew or should have known" of that fact."
"[HMRC] will contend that the Appellant's conduct set out above is reckless. The Appellant knew or should have known that the transactions were connected with fraud."
"Given all the above factors [HMRC] properly concluded that the Appellant knew or should have known that the transactions were connected with fraud."
"For the avoidance of doubt [HMRC] do not read the decision of Chairman Bishopp in Calltel as requiring mere "negligence" to be established. For the same reason, [HMRC] have no difficulty in seeing the test for "means of knowledge" as akin to e.g. a variety of "Nelsonian blindness"."
"Consistent with the traders' EU law obligations … an appropriate form of "Nelsonian blindness" (whereby "blind-eye" knowledge equates to knowledge) in the present context would be along the lines of, e.g. "a decision by a trader to refrain from taking all reasonable steps to satisfy himself that his transaction was not connected with fraud."
"In fact there appears to be little of substance between the parties on this point: it is agreed that something more than (by definition unwitting) "negligence" is required; it is further agreed that the nature of the (minimum) conduct required is instead akin to recklessness…."
"Further or alternatively, given its actual knowledge of its own business, Olympia should have taken certain further reasonable steps to investigate its deal chains. If it had done so, it would have discovered that its transactions were almost certain (alternatively more likely than not) to be connected with fraud. Therefore Olympia had the knowledge or means of knowledge and its appeals in relation to the 15 "straight" MTIC deals must fail."
"From all the above Olympia should have been put on inquiry and checked properly the bona fides of Topnotch …thus declining to do the deals… Further and in any event Olympia – from its knowledge of the market and the fraud in it – should have suspected that it was being used and that it was more likely than not that such a lucrative deal that had apparently "fallen into its lap" was too good to be true and thus connected with MTIC fraud."
"The decisions appealed against are to the effect that the Appellant ought to have known it was involved in MTIC [Missing Trader Intra-Community (fraud)] transactions. The issue in this appeal is whether those decisions are correct."
"Mr Beal characterised Mr Moser's case as involving the following syllogism:
(1) The wholesale market in mobile phones in the UK is beset by fraud;
(2) The Appellant knew that (1) was the case;
(3) The Appellant knew that it had to take certain reasonable steps to avoid becoming unwittingly caught up in fraud;
(4) The Appellant either failed to take reasonable steps, or failed to take heed of the results arising from the reasonable steps it did take;
(5) The Appellant accordingly ought to have known that its transactions were part of a fraud."
The principle in Kittel
The European cases
"It must therefore be held that an irrebuttable presumption, as opposed to an ordinary presumption, would go further than is necessary in order to ensure effective recovery and would be contrary to the principle of proportionality in that it would not enable the taxable person to adduce evidence in rebuttal for consideration by the judge hearing attachment proceedings."
"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." (§ 51)
"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." (§ 52)
"27. In my opinion, Member States may, under the Sixth Directive, hold a person liable for payment of VAT when, at the time he effected the transaction, he knew or reasonably ought to have known that VAT would go unpaid in the supply chain. In this respect, the national tax authorities may rely on presumptions of such knowledge. Nevertheless, those presumptions must not de facto bring about a system of strict liability.
28. It follows that presumptions of VAT fraud must arise from circumstances, indicative of VAT fraud, of which traders may reasonably be expected to have acquired knowledge. Member states may impose a duty on traders to be vigilant and to inform themselves as to the background of the goods in which they are trading. However, this duty must not place too heavy a burden on traders who take the necessary precautions to ensure that they are trading in good faith.
29. In addition, the presumptions must be rebuttable, without demanding evidence of facts that are excessively difficult for traders to ascertain."
30. If these requirements are not fulfilled, the application of presumptions would effectively undermine the imperative that a person can only be held liable for payment of VAT when he knew or reasonably ought to have known that VAT would go unpaid. That would be tantamount to introducing strict liability through the backdoor."
"While art 21(3) of the Sixth Directive allows a Member State to make a person jointly and severally liable for the payment of VAT if, at the time of the supply, that person knew or had reasonable grounds to suspect that the VAT payable in respect of that supply, or of any previous or subsequent supply, would go unpaid, and to rely on presumptions in that regard, it is none the less true that such presumptions may not be formulated in such a way as to make it practically impossible or excessively difficult for the taxable person to rebut them with evidence to the contrary. As the Advocate General observed in para 27 of his opinion, those presumptions would, de facto, bring about a system of strict liability, going beyond what is necessary to preserve the public exchequer's rights."
"Traders who take every precaution which could reasonably be required of them to ensure that their transactions do not form part of a chain which includes a transaction vitiated by VAT fraud must be able to rely on the legality of those transactions without the risk of being made jointly and severally liable to pay the VAT due from another taxable person (see, to that effect, Optigen Ltd v Customs and Excise Comrs (Joined cases C-354/03, C-355/03 and C-484/03) [2006] STC 419, [2006] 2 WLR 456, para 52)."
"whether, where a recipient of a supply of goods is a taxable person who did not and could not know that the transaction concerned was part of a fraud committed by the seller, art 17 of the Sixth Directive must be interpreted as meaning that it precludes a rule of national law under which the fact that the contract of sale is void, by reason of a civil law provision which renders the contract incurably void as contrary to public policy for unlawful basis of the contract attributable to the seller, causes that taxable person to lose his right to deduct that tax…
whether the answer to that question is different where the contract is incurably void for fraudulent evasion of VAT…
whether the answer to that question is different where the taxable person knew or should have known that, by his purchase, he was participating in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT."
"51. In the light of the foregoing, it is apparent that traders who take every precaution which could reasonably be required of them to ensure that their transactions are not connected with fraud, be it the fraudulent evasion of VAT or other fraud, must be able to rely on the legality of those transactions without the risk of losing their right to deduct the input VAT (see, to that effect, Customs and Excise Comrs v Federation of Technological Industries (Case C-384/04) [2006] STC 1483, para 33).
52. It follows that, where a recipient of a supply of goods is a taxable person who did not and could not know that the transaction concerned was connected with a fraud committed by the seller, art 17 of the Sixth Directive must be interpreted as meaning that it precludes a rule of national law under which the fact that the contract of sale is void, by reason of a civil law provision which renders that contract incurably void as contrary to public policy for unlawful basis of the contract attributable to the seller, causes that taxable person to lose the right to deduct the VAT he has paid. It is irrelevant in this respect whether the fact that the contract is void is due to fraudulent evasion of VAT or to other fraud.
53. By contrast, the objective criteria which form the basis of the concepts of 'supply of goods effected by a taxable person acting as such' and 'economic activity' are not met where tax is evaded by the taxable person himself (see Halifax plc v Customs and Excise Comrs (Case C-255/02) [2006] STC 919, [2006] Ch 387, para 59).
54. As the court has already observed, preventing tax evasion, avoidance and abuse is an objective recognised and encouraged by the Sixth Directive (see Gemeente Leusden v Staatssecretaris van Financien (Cases C-487/01 and C-7/02) [2007] STC 776, [2004] ECR I-5337, para 76). Community law cannot be relied on for abusive or fraudulent ends (see, inter alia, Kefalas v Greece and OAE (Case C-367/96) [1998] ECR I-2843, para 20; Case Diamantis v Greece (Case C-373/97) [2000] ECR I-1705, para 33; and I/S Fini H v Skatteministeriet (Case C-32/03) [2005] STC 903, [2005] ECR I-1599, para 32).
55. Where the tax authorities find that the right to deduct has been exercised fraudulently, they are permitted to claim repayment of the deducted sums retroactively (see, inter alia, Rompelman v Minister van Financiën (Case 268/83) [1985] ECR 655, para 24; Intercommunale voor Zeewaterontzilting (in liquidation) v Belgium (Case C-110/94) [1996] STC 569, [1996] ECR I-857, para 24; and Gabalfrisa (para 46)). It is a matter for the national court to refuse to allow the right to deduct where it is established, on the basis of objective evidence, that that right is being relied on for fraudulent ends (see Fini H (para 34)).
56. In the same way, a taxable person who knew or should have known that, by his purchase, he was taking part in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT must, for the purposes of the Sixth Directive, be regarded as a participant in that fraud, irrespective of whether or not he profited by the resale of the goods.
57. That is because in such a situation the taxable person aids the perpetrators of the fraud and becomes their accomplice.
58. In addition, such an interpretation, by making it more difficult to carry out fraudulent transactions, is apt to prevent them.
59. Therefore, it is for the referring court to refuse entitlement to the right to deduct where it is ascertained, having regard to objective factors, that the taxable person knew or should have known that, by his purchase, he was participating in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT, and to do so even where the transaction in question meets the objective criteria which form the basis of the concepts of 'supply of goods effected by a taxable person acting as such' and 'economic activity'.
60. It follows from the foregoing that the answer to the questions must be that where a recipient of a supply of goods is a taxable person who did not and could not know that the transaction concerned was connected with a fraud committed by the seller, art 17 of the Sixth Directive must be interpreted as meaning that it precludes a rule of national law under which the fact that the contract of sale is void—by reason of a civil law provision which renders that contract incurably void as contrary to public policy for unlawful basis of the contract attributable to the seller—causes that taxable person to lose the right to deduct the VAT he has paid. It is irrelevant in this respect whether the fact that the contract is void is due to fraudulent evasion of VAT or to other fraud.
61. By contrast, where it is ascertained, having regard to objective factors, that the supply is to a taxable person who knew or should have known that, by his purchase, he was participating in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT, it is for the national court to refuse that taxable person entitlement to the right to deduct."
i) The precautions are precautions to ensure that their transactions are not connected with fraud (i.e. the fraud is not necessarily restricted to the particular chain in which the taxpayer finds himself); and
ii) The fraud can be the fraudulent evasion of VAT or other fraud (i.e. the fraud is not limited to VAT fraud).
"56 De même, un assujetti qui savait ou aurait dû savoir que, par son acquisition, il participait à une opération impliquée dans une fraude à la TVA, doit, pour les besoins de la sixième directive, être considéré comme participant à cette fraude, et ceci indépendamment de la question de savoir s'il tire ou non un bénéfice de la revente des biens.
57 En effet, dans une telle situation, l'assujetti prête la main aux auteurs de la fraude et devient complice de celle-ci."
i) Whereas the English translation speaks of a transaction "connected with" fraudulent evasion of VAT the French text speaks of an operation "impliquée dans" a VAT fraud. This is true both of paragraph 56 and also of paragraph 51. The word "impliquée" may suggest rather closer involvement than the more general "connected with".
ii) Paragraph 57 in the French text begins with the words "En effet". The English translation, "That is because", is a possible translation of the French phrase, but it is one that emphasises the theoretical rather than the practical link between paragraph 56 and paragraph 57. Other translations might have been "In effect" or "In fact" or "Indeed" which would have emphasised the practical link.
iii) The French "prête la main" suggests a more active help than the more neutral "aids" in the English translation.
iv) Whereas the English translation speaks of the taxpayer becoming "their accomplice" (i.e. the fraudsters' accomplice) the French text ends with the phrase "complice de celle-ci", where "celle-ci" must refer back to "la fraude". In other words according to the French text the taxpayer is complicit in the fraud itself.
"Dès lors, il appartient à la juridiction nationale de refuser le bénéfice du droit à déduction s'il est établi, au vu des éléments objectifs, que l'assujetti savait ou aurait dû savoir que, par son acquisition, il participait à une opération impliquée dans une fraude à la TVA et ceci même si l'opération en cause satisfait aux critères objectifs sur lesquels sont fondées les notions de livraisons de biens effectuées par un assujetti agissant en tant que tel et d'activité économique."
"75. Certainly the supplier is under an obligation to do all in his power to ensure that the intra-Community supply is properly carried out. If, by contract, he leaves the transport of the goods to another Member State to the acquirer, he must—as stated in the explanations accompanying the first question—in certain circumstances bear the consequences of non-performance of that obligation by the acquirer.
76. The seller must also satisfy himself of the seriousness of his business partner. The objective of preventing tax evasion justifies heavy requirements being involved in fulfilling that obligation. It is for the national court to decide whether the supplier has fulfilled it. According to the information which it has supplied in the reference, it appears that Teleos and others exhausted all the possibilities at their disposal in scrutinising TT.
77. It would, on the other hand, be excessive to go so far as to hold the supplier liable for criminal conduct of his business partner, against which he cannot protect himself."
"The idea that, in the levying of VAT, a careful and honest taxable person should not have to assume liability for the fraudulent conduct of others, is expressed in a series of decisions on carousel frauds (see in particular Federation of Technological Industries (para 33), Optigen (para 52 et seq), and Kittel and Ricolta (para 45 et seq))."
"… it would be contrary to the principle of legal certainty if a Member State which has laid down the conditions for the application of the exemption of intra-Community supplies by prescribing, among other things, a list of the documents to be presented to the competent authorities, and which has accepted, initially, the documents presented by the supplier as evidence establishing entitlement to the exemption, could subsequently require that supplier to account for the VAT on that supply, where it transpires that, because of the purchaser's fraud, of which the supplier had and could have had no knowledge, the goods concerned did not actually leave the territory of the Member State of supply."
"the case law according to which it is neither disproportionate nor contrary to the general principles of law which the court is required to uphold to require an importer who has acted in good faith to pay customs duties payable on the importation of goods in respect of which the exporter has committed a customs offence, where the importer has played no part in that offence, is applicable to this case."
"Admittedly, the objective of preventing tax evasion sometimes justifies stringent requirements as regards suppliers' obligations. However, any sharing of the risk between the supplier and the tax authorities, following fraud committed by a third party, must be compatible with the principle of proportionality. Furthermore, rather than preventing tax evasion, a regime imposing the entire responsibility for the payment of VAT on suppliers, regardless of whether or not they were involved in the fraud, does not necessarily safeguard the harmonised VAT system from evasion and abuse by purchasers. The latter, were they exempted from all responsibility, could, in effect, be encouraged not to dispatch or not to transport the goods out of the Member State of supply and not to declare the goods for VAT purposes in the envisaged Member States of destination."
"Moreover, according to the court's settled case law, which is applicable to the main proceedings by way of analogy, it would not be contrary to Community law to require the supplier to take every step which could reasonably be required of him to satisfy himself that the transaction which he is effecting does not result in his participation in tax evasion (see, as regards 'carousel' type fraud, Federation of Technological Industries (para 33) and Kittel and Recolta Recycling (para 51))."
"Accordingly, the fact that the supplier acted in good faith, that he took every reasonable measure in his power and that his participation in fraud is excluded are important points in deciding whether that supplier can be obliged to account for the VAT after the event."
"The reply to the third question referred must therefore be that the first subparagraph of art 28c(A)(a) of the Sixth Directive is to be interpreted as precluding the competent authorities of the Member State of supply from requiring a supplier, who acted in good faith and submitted evidence establishing, at first sight, his right to the exemption of an intra-Community supply of goods, subsequently to account for VAT on those goods where that evidence is found to be false, without, however, the supplier's involvement in the tax evasion being established, provided that the supplier took every reasonable measure in his power to ensure that the intra-Community supply he was effecting did not lead to his participation in such evasion."
"45. Viewed against that background, it would to my mind clearly be disproportionate to hold, in circumstances such as those in the main proceedings, a taxable person liable for the shortfall in tax revenues caused by fraudulent acts of third parties. A taxable person can certainly be expected to assume the task attributed to him under the common system of VAT with all due diligence and care and be held responsible for any shortcomings in that regard. But it falls, as regards shortcomings outside the sphere of influence of the taxable person, to the Member State to ensure—in the interest of the public purse—the overall functioning of the system and to prevent any evasion, avoidance or abuse. The corresponding risks should therefore also be borne by the Member State.
46. That view is supported by a number of decisions of the court, from which—in spite of certain differences regarding the factual circumstances—it appears clearly that a taxable person acting in good faith, that is, more particularly, on condition that he had no part in the irregularities and took every precaution reasonably required, should not have to assume liability for the fraudulent conduct of others."
"49. A supplier such as the one at issue in the main proceedings, who is, as the referring court established, unable even by exercising due commercial care, to recognise that the conditions for exemption were in reality not met, certainly meets the standards of acting in good faith and of diligence as envisaged by the above-mentioned case law. It may be added in that regard that it appears from the order for reference that even the customs authorities contacted by Netto Supermarkt were unable, without more, to see at first sight that the documents produced were falsified."
"As the Advocate General has pointed out in para 45 of his opinion, it would clearly be disproportionate to hold a taxable person liable for the shortfall in tax caused by fraudulent acts of third parties over which he has no influence whatsoever.
24. On the other hand, as the court has already held, it is not contrary to Community law to require the supplier to take every step which could reasonably be required of him to satisfy himself that the transaction which he is effecting does not result in his participation in tax evasion (see Teleos (para 65), and the case law cited there).
25. Accordingly, the fact that the supplier acted in good faith, that he took every reasonable measure in his power and that his participation in fraud is excluded are important points in deciding whether that supplier can be obliged to account for the VAT after the event (see Teleos (para 66))."
i) The objective of preventing evasion of VAT is an objective encouraged by the Sixth Directive (Kittel § 54);
ii) This objective precludes the recovery of input tax where the tax is evaded by the taxable person himself (Kittel § 53). In such cases where the right to deduct has been exercised fraudulently the deduction may be retrospectively disallowed (Kittel § 55);
iii) This objective sometimes justifies stringent requirements as regards suppliers' obligations, but any sharing of risk must be compatible with the principle of proportionality (Teleos § 58);
iv) It is disproportionate and contrary to Community law to require a person who is a careful and honest trader to assume liability for the frauds of others (Teleos A-G's opinion § 77, footnote);
v) It is also disproportionate to hold a taxable person liable for fraudulent acts of third parties over whom he has no influence (Netto § 23):
vi) A trader who does take every precaution that could reasonably be required of him, and does not realise that he is participating in VAT fraud must be entitled to rely on the legality of his own transaction (FTI § 33);
vii) A person who knew or should have known that by his purchase he was taking part in a transaction connected with the fraudulent evasion of VAT is to be treated in the same way as a person who fraudulently exercises the right to deduct (Kittel §§ 55, 56);
viii) It is not contrary to Community law to require a supplier to take every step that could reasonably be required of him to satisfy himself that the transaction which he is effecting does not result in his participant in tax evasion (Teleos § 65; Netto § 24);
ix) Likewise a taxable person can be expected to act with all due diligence and care (Netto A-G's opinion § 45);
x) Whether a taxable person knew or should have known that he was participating in a transaction connected with the fraudulent evasion of VAT must be determined having regard to objective facts or factors (Kittel § 59);
xi) Community law does not prohibit presumptions, but presumptions must be rebuttable by evidence (Garage Molenheide § 52; FTI § 32).
Domestic case-law
"The case that must be assumed is that Blackstar [the broker] is dishonestly involved in the defaulter chain [i.e. the dirty chain] and knows that, if it puts forward a VAT return to the Revenue claiming back its input tax in respect of the mobile phones which have gone round the defaulter chain, it will not receive that money because the Revenue will refuse to pay. Hence, it is to be assumed, it persuades Evolution [the contra-trader] to enter knowingly into and/or to execute a 'contra-trading' transaction in respect of cameras which will be or are being imported. Evolution must be assumed to know of, and thus participate in, Blackstar's dishonest purpose. In this regard, it would not matter whether Evolution is already intending to acquire cameras by import and is prepared to use that transaction for the dishonest set off, or whether the import of the cameras is constructed solely for the purpose of establishing the transaction. Evolution then knowingly agrees to buy the cameras from or through Blackstar, pays Blackstar VAT which thus allows Blackstar dishonestly to recover off-set VAT which it would not have received direct from the Revenue, and then claims back what it has paid to Blackstar in its own VAT return on exporting the cameras. The contra-trading chain is likely to be relatively short. Indeed Brayfal, for example, in the March 2006 accounting period purchased stock from only one supplier, Future, and sold to only one customer, in Austria."
"On the basis of the assumed facts, whether or not Evolution knew of the precise nature of the defaulter chain or of the goods purportedly dealt with in that chain or the identities of the participants in that chain, Evolution knew of the fraudulent aim of Blackstar in acquiring, through the off-set on the contra-trading transaction, the opportunity to receive, by such off-set, VAT which it would not be able to recover direct from the Revenue. The Revenue asserts, relying on Kittel, that it is entitled to refuse the input tax when Evolution exports the cameras it has acquired from Blackstar, and enters into its return, as input tax, the VAT it has paid to Blackstar. The claimants' case is that Kittel only legitimises a refusal by the Revenue to pay VAT due in respect of the goods the subject matter of the defaulter chain. That is the issue which I am asked to decide." (Emphasis in original)
"The words which record these definitive statements [in paragraphs 55, 56 and 61 of Kittel] are untrammelled by any reference to the need for establishing that the taxable person must be a member of a defaulter chain, or that he must be dealing in the same goods as had been the subject of a defaulter chain. The only such references in the judgment are for the purpose of differentiating the result in relation to Kittel from that with regard to Recolta, where the taxable person was innocent but was said to be rendered liable to sanctions by the Revenue because of his participation in the defaulter chain in relation to the same goods."
"In those circumstances there is no question of any need for an extension, but the Revenue is inviting me here simply to follow the European Court in Kittel. If however it is necessary to extend Kittel, by applying those principles for the first time in relation to a participant in a contra-trade chain deliberately assisting in the fraudulent recovery of VAT reclaimed at the end of the defaulter chain, then Mr Anderson submits that such is a natural and inevitable extension."
"Further, there are bound to be evidential difficulties with regard to precisely what needs to be proved in respect of what might be loosely described as mens rea—'knew or should have known' (see Kittel [2008] STC 1537, [2006] ECR I-6161, para 56 of the judgment), as contrasted with having 'no knowledge and no means of knowledge' (see Bond House [2006] STC 419, [2006] Ch 218, para 46 of the judgment)—and the extent to which such mens rea must be proved."
"The assumed facts, upon which I have been satisfied, put the case at the highest against these claimants; but of course there may well be gradations of knowledge which would need to be considered by the tribunal …"
Discussion
"The principle of legal certainty must be trumped by the 'objective recognised and encouraged by the Sixth Directive'."
"He must, I think, be taken to have known what a reasonable man would have known. If, therefore, he knew or is to be taken to have known of the want of authority, as, for instance, if the circumstances were such as to put a reasonable man on inquiry, and he made none, or if he was put off by an answer that would not have satisfied a reasonable man, or, in other words, if he was negligent in not perceiving the want of authority, then he is taken to have notice of it."
Identifying the fraud and the connection with fraud
"Endless variations on the chain of transactions are imaginable, considerably more complicated than the one described above, and in reality the same goods may be 'sent around' several different chains. Still, the problem fundamentally remains the same: a trader collects an amount paid to him as VAT but does not account for it to the tax authorities. The defaulting trader may use a 'hijacked' VAT number or it may register itself for VAT and simply disappear before the tax authorities take action." (emphasis added)
"A company ('B') established in the United Kingdom, buys goods from a company ('A') in another Member State. No VAT is due from A in respect of the acquisition, but B is required to account for VAT in respect of its onward sales in the United Kingdom. B sells the goods, usually at a discount, to a third company ('C') also established in the United Kingdom, but fails to account for VAT. C is called a 'buffer company'. It sells the goods to another company in the United Kingdom at a small profit, accounting for VAT on the sale, but reclaiming input VAT. There may be a series of further sales, but eventually the goods reach a company which sells them to a VAT registered trader in another Member State. This sale is exempt from VAT, but the seller is entitled to recover input tax and accordingly seeks to recover from the Commissioners the VAT which it paid on its purchase of the goods from the last buffer company. If such repayment is made, the Commissioners pay to this company the VAT charged on the sale by the last buffer company and yet do not receive the amount charged as VAT by B. The hallmark of a true carousel fraud is that the goods are ultimately sold back to the original seller, company A. The cycle can then start again. On each circuit of the carousel the amount paid as VAT to B is extracted from the public revenue." (Emphasis added)
"the imperative that a person can only be held liable for payment of VAT when he knew or reasonably ought to have known that VAT would go unpaid." (Emphasis added)
"In reality, the methods used are as fanciful and complicated as the imaginations of the people who think them up. I therefore agree with Advocate General Poiares Maduro who, in para 8 of his opinion in Optigen [2006] STC 419, finds that in every case the bottom line is that an amount received in respect of VAT is not declared."
"The fraud is plainly committed, if the participants in such chain are dishonest, at the stage of the missing trader, although the loss may not crystallise until the Revenue has to pay out in full in respect of the return filed by the exporter." (Emphasis in original)
"… on the assumed facts … Evolution is 'a taxable person who knew … that by his purchase, he was taking part in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT'. In those circumstances, I am satisfied that the Revenue would have the right to refuse to pay the input claimed, and my concluded view is the same as was the untutored response of Charles J in Megantic: and the same as the provisional view of Mr Bishopp in Calltell (see [2007] UKVAT V20266, para 18) that:
'18. … if the Respondents can show that the transactions were what they claim them to be … they have at least an arguable case that a trader who, knowingly or with means of knowledge, engages in conduct designed to conceal, or avoid the consequences of discovery of, a fraud should be in no better position than the perpetrator of the fraud.'"
i) The dishonest failure to account for VAT by the defaulter or missing trader in the dirty chain; and
ii) The dishonest cover-up of that fraud by the contra-trader.
"In my judgment, however, it is no answer for a man charged with having knowingly assisted in a fraudulent and dishonest scheme to say that he thought that it was "only" a breach of exchange control or "only" a case of tax evasion. It is not necessary that he should have been aware of the precise nature of the fraud or even of the identity of its victim. A man who consciously assists others by making arrangements which he knows are calculated to conceal what is happening from a third party, takes the risk that they are part of a fraud practised on that party."
"whether or not Evolution knew of the precise nature of the defaulter chain or of the goods purportedly dealt with in that chain or the identities of the participants in that chain, Evolution knew of the fraudulent aim of Blackstar in acquiring, through the off-set on the contra-trading transaction, the opportunity to receive, by such off-set, VAT which it would not be able to recover direct from the Revenue." (Emphasis added)
"… conceptually there is therefore a problem in understanding what is the fraud about which the Appellant is said to know or ought to have known. If it be the case that Sygnet and Uni-Brand are involved in a fraud in the sense of helping to cover up the missing traders' defaults by arranging for a reduced repayment (Sygnet) or no repayment (Uni-Brand), at least they were a participant in the chain that included the Appellant. But if Sygnet and Uni-Brand were not so involved and the only fraudsters are the missing traders, such missing traders were not involved in any chain that has a logical connection with the chains in which the Appellant is a party, and in any event the tax that was not paid by the missing traders was in most cases due only after the Appellant's deals."
"It is difficult to see how a trader, entering into a chain of transactions in which every trader accounts correctly for VAT (and which is not tainted for some other reason) could have the means of knowing that it is a device for concealing, or avoiding the consequences of discovery of, another, fraudulent, chain of transactions. Nevertheless it is, we think, possible that a trader could have the means of knowing that, by his participation, he is assisting a fraud. Much will depend on the facts, but an obvious example might be the offer of an easy purchase and sale generating a conspicuously generous profit for no evident reason. A trader receiving such an offer would be well advised to ask why it had been made; if he did not he would be likely to fail the test set out at paragraph 51 of the judgment in Kittel."
The Tribunal's identification of the fraud
Livewire
"(14) It is Customs' case that the purported scheme to defraud the Revenue relates to the fraudulent evasions of VAT which are said to have taken place in other supply chains of which the Appellant was not a part, and in relation to contra-trading or "offset" transactions which are said to have been carried out by two traders, Uni-Brand (Europe) Ltd ("Uni-Brand") and Sygnet Computing Ltd ("Sygnet").
(15) It is Customs' case that the fraud is alleged to have involved a number of allegedly missing or defaulting traders in other supply chains which Customs say are connected to the Appellant's direct supply chains because those chains form part of an overall scheme to defraud."
"We find that such evidence falls far short of cogent evidence and accordingly find that neither Sygnet nor Uni-Brand were knowingly parties to a fraud and accordingly the only fraud is that committed by the missing traders."
Olympia
The Tribunal's formulation of the test of knowledge
Livewire
"In contra-trading there are, in its simplest theoretical form, two chains of transactions. First, the "dirty chain," in which there is a missing trader, defaulting trader, or trader using a hijacked VAT number ("missing trader" for short), comprising A (the missing trader) who is the importer of goods into the UK, who sells them to B, who sells them to C who exports the goods, and is thus in a VAT reclaim position. (For simplicity we shall use the expressions import and export for intra-Community trade, acknowledging that these are not the proper labels.) Secondly, the "clean chain,"1 in which there are no missing traders, comprising C, who is this time the importer, who sells to D, who sells to E, the exporter (the Appellant in this appeal is in the position of E). The effect of the clean chain is that the net input tax position of C in the dirty chain is cancelled by output VAT in the clean chain. There is no benefit to C in this as C has paid the input tax to B, and therefore C could be a trader who happens to carry out both import and export transactions unconnected with any fraud, or C could be a trader who is controlled by a "puppet master" to enter into the cancelling transactions to disguise A's involvement in a fraud. The effect of the contra-trades is that C does not excite Customs' attention as it is not applying for a repayment; the non-payment of tax by A is less noticeable since without a return Customs do not know how much tax A owes. The input tax reclaim that C had in the dirty chain has moved to E who is at the end of a clean chain. The only way for Customs to refuse repayment of E's input tax is to show that E knew or ought to have known of A's fraud in a completely different chain, and possibly of C's involvement. Since, as we have demonstrated in our example in paragraph 4 above, the only gain from A's fraud is the recovery of input tax by E this must imply that E is a participant in the fraud and, unless he is the puppet-master, is presumably sharing the tax recovered with someone else. As Mr Scorey pointed out it is difficult to see how a case of E having means of knowledge, rather than actual knowledge, can arise." (Emphasis added)
Olympia
"The only way for Customs to refuse repayment of E's input tax is to show that E knew or ought to have known of A's fraud in a completely different chain, and of C's involvement in the fraud."
Conclusion
Does it make any difference?
Should have known: the Tribunal's test
Livewire
"We quite agree that the due diligence was flawed and we are surprised that the Appellant did not take this more seriously, particularly as they had already been victims of a fraud. We suspect that much of the due diligence was carried out because Customs asked to see it on their monthly visits, rather than because the Appellant thought it assisted them. … It is worth pointing out that even if the Appellant had conducted perfect due diligence on its suppliers and customers it could not have indicated the fraud by the missing traders in the dirty chain."
Olympia
"We consider that on its ordinary wording "ought to have known" is a factual test comprising two limbs. First, one should start with all the facts (a) actually known to the person and ask whether in the light of those facts a reasonable businessman would have known that the transaction in question was connected with fraud. Secondly, it would include (b) those facts that would have been known to the person if he had taken some action to discover them that the reasonable businessman would have taken in the circumstances (which is not necessarily the same as every precaution reasonably required), but which the person did not. Both of these require one to determine the degree of experience of the reasonable businessman, for which we draw by analogy on the contrast made in s 214 of the Insolvency Act 1986:
"(4) For the purposes of subsections (2) and (3) [which includes that that person knew or ought to have concluded that there was no reasonable prospect that the company would avoid going into insolvent liquidation], the facts which a director of a company ought to know or ascertain, the conclusions which he ought to reach and the steps which he ought to take are those which would be known or ascertained, or reached or taken, by a reasonably diligent person having both-
(a) the general knowledge, skill and experience that may reasonably be expected of a person carrying out the same functions as are carried out by that director in relation to the company, and
(b) the general knowledge, skill and experience that that director has."
In favour of a test on the lines of subs (4)(a) (or a combination of both tests) is that this is consistent with the director's duty to the company and its creditors, who can expect a director to have a reasonable standard of experience. In favour of a test on the lines of subs (4)(b) is the argument that taking the director's actual experience into account is more relevant to what the particular person ought to have known. The parties did not make any submissions on this point. On balance, while we see the merits of the former for consistency, we consider that this is too high a test in the present circumstances which are far removed from a director's personal liability to creditors and concerns whether Customs can decline to pay input tax to which the company is in principle entitled. The test that we apply is accordingly whether a person with the knowledge, skill and experience of the director concerned would have known that the transactions were connected with fraud. This appeal does not depend on the Appellant failing to take precautions, but more on whether it should have acted differently on information that it had obtained. Something on which both counsel were agreed was that "they jolly well ought to have known" conveyed the right approach." (emphasis supplied)
"Weighing up all these factors, we consider that Mr Habib was, on account of his inexperience, naïve and gullible. Had we decided that the test of "ought to have known" should be based on an ordinarily competent director we might well have decided that such a person ought at least to have made further enquiries, but we have based the test on the experience of the particular director, Mr Habib. He was the ideal person for a "puppet master" to involve in fraud without his knowing. On balance, we believe that a person with his experience would not have known that there was fraud in the deal chains. Accordingly we conclude that it cannot be said that he, and accordingly the Appellant, ought to have known about the fraud in the deal chains."
Result