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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 >> The Charity Commission for England and Wales v Mountstar (PTC) Ltd [2016] EWHC 876 (Ch) (21 April 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/876.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 876 (Ch), [2016] 3 WLR 218, [2016] WLR(D) 201, [2016] Ch 612 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF THE CUP TRUST
AND IN THE MATTER OF SECTION 78(5) OF THE CHARITIES ACT 2011
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE CHARITY COMMISSION FOR ENGLAND AND WALES |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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MOUNTSTAR (PTC) LIMITED (a private trust company incorporated under the laws of the British Virgin Islands) JONATHAN BURCHFIELD (Joint Interim Manager of The Cup Trust) ANN PHILLIPS (Joint Interim Manager of The Cup Trust) |
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Keith Gordon (instructed by Osborne Clarke LLP) for the First Defendant
Jonathan Davey QC (instructed by Stone King LLP) for the Second and Third Defendants
Hearing date: 19 January 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE SNOWDEN :
The Scheme
i) the Cup Trust borrowed money interest-free for a day from a Mr. McCulloch, who was an associate of Mr. Jenner;ii) the Cup Trust used the borrowed money to purchase gilts at market value from another trust ("the VL settlement");
iii) the Cup Trust then sold the gilts at a nominal value (0.01% of full value) to an intermediary, a Mr. Clark;
iv) Mr. Clark then sold the gilts on to a high-net-worth individual UK-based taxpayer at the same nominal value;
v) the taxpayer then sold the gilts back to the VL settlement at full market value;
vi) the taxpayer then "donated" the proceeds of the sale of the gilts plus a nominal sum (0.02% of the full value) to the Cup Trust;
vii) the Cup Trust then used the "donation" to repay the original loan from Mr. McCulloch; and
viii) the Cup Trust held a call option over the gilts which it could exercise if for any reason it did not receive a matching donation from the taxpayer that would compensate it for the sale at an undervalue.
"If successful the [Cup Trust] will receive some £46 million gift aid from HMRC whilst the donors' higher rate tax relief totals some £55 million. That contrasts with the more conventional gift aid arrangement where the donors give £176 million which the [Cup Trust] retains and then claims gift aid (£46 million) generating total funds of £222 million for the [Cup Trust]. The donors receive their higher rate tax relief of £55 million to offset their original donations of £176 million, leaving them £121 million out of pocket. Thus, if successful, the £155,000 of actual cash provided to and retained by the [Cup Trust] generates £46 million gift aid and £55 million tax relief for the donors at a total cost of £101 million to HMRC."
"Spotlight 9: Gift Aid with no real gift
An avoidance scheme exploiting the Gift Aid provisions has recently been disclosed to HMRC. The scheme seeks to exploit the rules which enable a charity to claim a repayment of tax at the basic rate on a qualifying donation by an individual. The individual may claim relief for the donation on the difference between the higher and basic rates of tax.
The scheme depends upon a circular series of payments. It starts with the charity purchasing, say, gilts of £100,000 which pass through a third party to an individual taxpayer for perhaps £10. The taxpayer is expected to make a sale for £100,000 and pass the money to the charity. There is an option that ensures the gilts will be returned to the charity if it does not receive a cash gift of £100,000 within one or two days.
HMRC do not accept that the charity is entitled to a repayment of tax or that Gift Aid relief is due to the individual. In HMRC's view a gift has not been made to the charity as it is no better off than before entering the arrangements. Therefore Gift Aid is not due.
HMRC will challenge the reliefs claimed in any instances where this scheme has been used and will litigate where appropriate."
The Appointment of the Interim Managers
"The Charity Commission (the Commission) registered the Cup Trust (the Trust) as a charity in April 2009, with a company called Mountstar - based in the British Virgin Islands - as its only trustee. Although the Trust generated 'income' of £176 million, only £55,000 has been given to charitable causes, and the Cup Trust claimed Gift Aid of £46 million. Despite its declared charitable aims, it is clear that the Trust was set up as a tax avoidance scheme by people known to be in the business of tax avoidance.
The Trust does not meet the public expectations of a charity and it is unacceptable that the Commission has not been able to put a stop to this abuse of charitable status. In the first instance, it is unacceptable that the Cup Trust was registered and that insufficient due diligence took place to check that there was a clear public benefit to its purpose. From the time when the Trust was first registered as a charity, there were clear signals that should have prompted an investigation by the Commission. Elementary checks with HMRC could have alerted the Commission to the true purpose of the Trust and its trustee. By the Commission's own admission, the continued registration of the Trust has been disastrous for the reputation of the Commission and the charity sector."
"2. … the interim manager shall have all the powers and duties of the trustee of the Charity to the exclusion of the trustee of the Charity with effect from the date of this Order.
4. … the interim manager shall, without prejudice to the generality of the functions set out in paragraph 2, discharge the specific functions set out in the schedule hereto and such other specific functions as the Commission may from time to time by further Order determine.
SCHEDULE
The functions of the interim manager shall be:
1. To take over the management and administration of the Charity and its property and discharge the functions of the trustee of the Charity to the exclusion of the trustee of the Charity and to take any steps necessary to secure and take control of the property of the Charity with effect from the date of this Order. In particular to:
- assume responsibility for handling the Charity's claims for gift aid with HMRC arising from the Charity's participation in the financial transactions involving the sale of gilts between January and December 2010 ("the Scheme"), and reply to and provide full answers to HMRC's requests for information in a timely fashion, including outstanding requests upon which penalties have been levied against the Charity by HMRC;
- examine the Charity's options to bring its gift aid claims to resolution, including - if this would be in the best interests of the Charity - options for withdrawal and novation of any future benefit of any claim;"
Similar provisions appeared in the subsequent appointment of Mrs. Phillips as joint Interim Manager in February 2014.
"228. The Charity's present property consists of its reputation, its right to pursue the gift aid claims and its right (if any) to sue Mr. Jenner and HNWTAP to disgorge them of any fees or benefits received and any contingent fees payable if the gift aid claims succeed.
229. For reasons which by now will be clear, Mountstar is unable or unwilling by its present directors to properly discharge its duties as charity trustee. On the basis of the evidence before us, all roads lead to Mr. Jenner. It is he who advises and coordinates the donors' claim and makes all of the decisions in relation to the Charity's gift aid claims. It is he who controls or is able to sufficiently influence each of the entities historically and presently involved in the Scheme. Mr. Stones has resigned and there is a risk that Mr. Mehigan is at least potentially conflicted by his personal history or relationship with Mr Jenner.
230. From his evidence before us, Mr. Jenner is either unwilling or unable to fully and frankly identify the manifold and manifest conflicts of interest inherent in the operation of the Scheme he constructed, which in substance rules him out of any involvement as director of Mountstar so long as it is charity trustee. Which leaves Mr. Mehigan who evidently is so dis-engaged from and disinterested in the interests and management of the Charity that he has neither given evidence nor, so far as we are aware, attended court.
231. We observe here that it has been most unhelpful that Mountstar has chosen to rely upon the apparently only conflicted director, Mr. Jenner, to handle these proceedings and give evidence on its behalf. This has put the Tribunal in the somewhat odd position of only hearing evidence from the conflicted director who simply could not shed light upon how the other directors have made their decisions. Whilst Mr. Mehigan and Mr. Stones could not have anticipated the questioning relating to Harry Associates, it would have been very helpful to hear their evidence in relation to the general issue of conflicts of interest and also the HMRC and blank cheques issues.
232. There is not a commonality of interest between the donors and the Charity except on the superficial level of both benefiting if the Scheme succeeds. Private donors can act as they want – prudently, recklessly, hands-on, hands-off, leaving the management of their affairs to others, influenced or not influenced by another, or otherwise. The Charity can only act consistent with the standards of an ordinary prudent man of business, independent of the influence of anyone interested in the transaction (Mr. Jenner).
233. Having adopted the Scheme and now made the gift aid claims, the Charity has to consider whether to press those claims given that HMRC has challenged them and how to co-operate with HMRC. Whether to pursue the claims and how to handle requests from HMRC for information and also how to deal with inquiries from the press and possibly other regulatory bodies will impact on its reputation, a key asset of any charity. At some stage it may need to consider whether to sue Mr. Jenner/HNWTAP for disgorgement of the benefits already received. Self-evidently, Mountstar at any rate with its present directors can do none of this.
234. For those reasons and pending the outcome of the statutory investigation, it in our judgment is both necessary and desirable to appoint an Interim Manager to protect the property of the Charity."
HMRC's rejection of the Gift Aid claims and the appeal
The Interim Managers obtain written advice from Michael Furness QC
"I remain of the view that the basic obstacle in the way of its success is the requirement in ITA 2007 section 414 that the taxpayer makes a gift to the charity, which (by section 416(2)) must comprise a sum of money. Where the transaction which is said to trigger a relief forms part of a series of pre-ordained transactions the legislation has to be applied realistically having regard to the series of transactions as a whole. When one looks at the series of transactions as a whole, starting with the loan to the charity, and ending with the repayment of the loan, and asks of each taxpayer participant whether they have made a cash gift to the charity in the amount claimed, the answer has to be "no". The only cash which the charity has acquired from the taxpayer is the tiny "turn" on the transaction which is built into the scheme. That is the most that can be said to have been given. The vast bulk of the gift is simply money which is circulated from the charity to the taxpayer and back again. Put another way, it is not possible on any sensible use of language to say that A has given £1 million to B, if at the conclusion of the transaction A is no worse off, and B is no better off than before they started.
… This is such an artificial and contrived scheme that no Tribunal or court is going to be willing to declare it a success unless compelled to do so by the prescriptive language of the legislation. This is particularly so due to the fact that the scheme is abusing a relief intended to stimulate genuine charitable giving. In fact, as HMRC's analysis shows, there are a range of reasons which a judge might use to do down the scheme over and above the basic argument which I favour…"
"I therefore remain of the view that the prospects of success for the charity's appeal are very slim indeed, or negligible. One should never rule out an unexpected result from litigation, and it is always possible that a judge would think my take on the basic merits of the scheme is wholly wrong and that the legislation does indeed permit taxpayers and charities to claim gift aid in this way. But I very much doubt it."
"Although a commercial organisation with money to spare might think the claim "worth a punt", charity trustees, with their duty to apply their assets prudently, could legitimately consider it inappropriate to put at risk a substantial amount of charity money on what is really no more than speculation at long odds.
Of course in the present case the considerations aired in the previous paragraph are academic, because this charity does not have £200,000 to spend on the litigation - its assets total only £20,000. This means that if the appeal is to be pursued it must be financed by a third party."
i) that the Interim Managers must be free to instruct solicitors and counsel of their choice;
ii) that the Interim Managers must have complete freedom to deal with HMRC and pursue or discontinue the Gift Aid claim as they saw fit;
iii) that funding would have to be available for so long as the litigation continued;
iv) that funding would have to cover the fees of the Interim Managers themselves;
v) that an indemnity would have to be provided against any adverse costs orders; and
vi) that each of the above commitments should be secured on liquid assets in the UK sufficient to cover the maximum liability that might be incurred.
"In these circumstances the only disadvantage to the charity of continuing with the appeal is likely to be some further loss of reputation but, for the reasons given above, it is hard to see why, from the charity's point of view that should outweigh the risk-free chance, albeit a remote one, of acquiring a very large amount of cash with which to pursue its charitable work. At this point the real argument against pursuing the appeal, it seems to me, is the potential damage it would inflict on the charitable sector as a whole. So the question becomes whether it is legitimate either for the Interim Managers, or for the Charity Commission in giving them advice, to take account of these wider considerations when taking a decision in relation to this particular charity."
"In my opinion, if the position is that the charity is simply unable to finance the cost of an appeal, including as many onward appeals as it may take to win, then the decision not to pursue the appeal is relatively straightforward. Because it is a very substantial decision having regard to the amount at stake, the Interim Managers would be entitled to expect to take the decision on the basis of Charity Commission advice given under section 110. If there were thought to be any doubt about whether they have power to abandon the appeal, that could be dealt with by an authorisation under section 105. Before getting to that point, it will be necessary for the Interim Managers to satisfy themselves (i) that commercial funding … will not be available and (ii) that Mountstar are not prepared to make available the sort of comprehensive funding package I have suggested.
If, contrary to my expectations, it does prove possible for the charity to undertake the appeal with full cover for its costs, and potential cost liabilities, then the Commission may decide to advise the Interim Managers to pursue the appeal in which case they will have to do that. If the Commission decides that it wishes to advise the Interim Managers against appealing, notwithstanding that it appears to be the in the interests of the charity to do so, then I think the matter should be referred to the court for directions."
The question of funding is pursued with Mountstar
The Charity Commission's Application
i) that it was not necessary or appropriate to comply with the criteria identified in Mr. Furness's opinion;ii) that Mr. Gordon should be instructed by the Interim Managers, with instructions being provided to the solicitors for the Interim Managers by Mountstar, through Mr. Mehigan;
iii) that "in principle" Mountstar was willing to provide funding for any further appeals beyond the FTT(T) subject to counsel advising that any such appeals had a reasonable prospect of success;
iv) that on the basis that the Interim Managers would opt out of the costs regime for the purposes of the FTT(T), no adverse costs order should arise at that stage, but that Mountstar was "in principle" willing to provide an indemnity against adverse costs orders thereafter if counsel advised that an appeal had a reasonable prospect of success;
v) that to provide security, Mountstar would make monthly payments of £10,000 into a designated client account over 18 months to cover the Cup Trust's own costs, together with a final balancing payment one month before the hearing before the FTT(T);
vi) that the funds would come from Mr. Mehigan's personal funds. It was asserted that Mr. Mehigan was willing to finance the litigation because "he does not believe it sensible for the Interim Managers to abandon the underlying appeal given its potential to result in substantial benefit to the charitable sector"; and
vii) that Mr. Jenner had "no current involvement" in Mountstar.
The Law
"76. Suspension of trustees etc and appointment of interim managers.
(1) Subsection (3) applies where, at any time after it has instituted an inquiry under section 46 with respect to any charity, the Commission is satisfied -
(a) that there is or has been any misconduct or mismanagement in the administration of the charity, or
(b) that it is necessary or desirable to act for the purpose of -
(i) protecting the property of the charity, or
(ii) securing a proper application for the purposes of the charity of that property or of property coming to the charity.
…
(3) The Commission may of its own motion do one or more of the following -
…
(g) by order appoint (in accordance with section 78) an interim manager, to act as receiver and manager in respect of the property and affairs of the charity."
"78. Interim managers: supplementary
(1) The Commission may under section 76(3)(g) appoint to be interim manager in respect of a charity such person (other than a member of its staff) as it thinks fit.
(2) An order made by the Commission under section 76(3)(g) may make provision with respect to the functions to be discharged by the interim manager appointed by the order…
(3) Those functions are to be discharged by the interim manager under the supervision of the Commission.
(4) In connection with the discharge of those functions, an order under section 76(3)(g) may provide -
(a) for the interim manager appointed by the order to have such powers and duties of the charity trustees of the charity concerned (whether arising under this Act or otherwise) as are specified in the order;
(b) for any powers or duties specified by virtue of paragraph (a) to be exercisable or performed by the interim manager to the exclusion of those trustees.
(5) Where a person has been appointed interim manager by any such order—
(a) section 110 (power to give advice and guidance) applies to the interim manager and the interim manager's functions as it applies to a charity trustee of the charity concerned and to the charity trustee's duties as such, and
(b) the Commission may apply to the High Court for directions in relation to any particular matter arising in connection with the discharge of those functions.
(6) The High Court may on an application under subsection (5)(b) –
(a) give such directions, or
(b) make such orders declaring the rights of any persons (whether before the court or not),
as it thinks just."
"105. Power to authorise dealings with charity property
(1) Subject to the provisions of this section, where it appears to the Commission that any action proposed or contemplated in the administration of a charity is expedient in the interests of the charity, the Commission may by order sanction that action, whether or not it would otherwise be within the powers exercisable by the charity trustees in the administration of the charity.
(2) Anything done under the authority of an order under this section is to be treated as properly done in the exercise of those powers.
110. Power to give advice
(1) The Commission may, on the written application of any charity trustee or trustee for a charity, give the applicant its opinion or advice in relation to any matter -
(a) relating to the performance of any duties of the applicant, as such a trustee, in relation to the charity concerned, or
(b) otherwise relating to the proper administration of the charity.
(2) A person ("P") who -
(a) is a charity trustee or trustee for a charity, and
(b) acts in accordance with any opinion or advice given by the Commission under subsection (1) (whether to P or another trustee),
is to be treated, as regards P's responsibility for so acting, as having acted in accordance with P's trust.
(3) But subsection (2) does not apply to P if, when so acting -
(a) P knows or has reasonable cause to suspect that the opinion or advice was given in ignorance of material facts, or
(b) a decision of the court or the Tribunal has been obtained on the matter or proceedings are pending to obtain one."
"[A trustee] is not allowed the same discretion in investing the moneys of the trust as if he were a person sui juris dealing with his own estate. Business men of ordinary prudence may, and frequently do, select investments which are more or less of a speculative character; but it is the duty of a trustee to confine himself to the class of investments which are permitted by the trust, and likewise to avoid all investments of that class which are attended with hazard".
Analysis
"(1) The first category is where the issue is whether some proposed action is within the trustees' powers. That is ultimately a question of construction of the trust instrument or a statute or both….
(2) The second category is where the issue is whether the proposed course of action is a proper exercise of the trustees' powers where there is no real doubt as to the nature of the trustees' powers and the trustees have decided how they want to exercise them but, because the decision is particularly momentous, the trustees wish to obtain the blessing of the court for the action on which they have resolved and which is within their powers. Obvious examples of that, which are very familiar in the Chancery Division, are a decision by trustees to sell a family estate or to sell a controlling holding in a family company. In such circumstances there is no doubt at all as to the extent of the trustees' powers nor is there any doubt as to what the trustees want to do but they think it prudent, and the court will give them their costs of doing so, to obtain the court's blessing on a momentous decision. In a case like that, there is no question of surrender of discretion and indeed it is most unlikely that the court will be persuaded in the absence of special circumstances to accept the surrender of discretion on a question of that sort, where the trustees are prima facie in a much better position than the court to know what is in the best interests of the beneficiaries.
(3) The third category is that of surrender of discretion properly so called. There the court will only accept a surrender of discretion for a good reason, the most obvious good reasons being either that the trustees are deadlocked (but honestly deadlocked, so that the question cannot be resolved by removing one trustee rather than another) or because the trustees are disabled as a result of a conflict of interest … The difference between category (2) and category (3) is simply as to whether the court is (under category (2)) approving the exercise of discretion by trustees or (under category (3)) exercising its own discretion.
(4) The fourth category is where trustees have actually taken action, and that action is attacked as being either outside their powers or an improper exercise of their powers. Cases of that sort are hostile litigation …"
This classification is not, of course, exhaustive or inflexible. An application may straddle more than one category. But it is a helpful tool for analysis.
"First, the court must be satisfied that the trustees have in fact formed the opinion, or made the decision, for which approval is sought. Secondly, the opinion must be "one at which a reasonable body of trustees properly instructed as to the meaning of the relevant clause could properly have arrived". Thirdly, the opinion must not be vitiated by any conflict of interest under which any of the trustees had been labouring."
"The court's function where there is no surrender of discretion is a limited one. It is concerned to see that the proposed exercise of the trustees' powers is lawful and within the power and that it does not infringe the trustees' duty to act as ordinary, reasonable and prudent trustees might act, ignoring irrelevant, improper or irrational factors; but it requires only to be satisfied that the trustees can properly form the view that the proposed transaction is for the benefit of beneficiaries or the trust estate and that they have in fact formed that view. In other words, once it appears that the proposed exercise is within the terms of the power, the court is concerned with limits of rationality and honesty; it does not withhold approval merely because it would not itself have exercised the power in the way proposed. The court, however, acts with caution, because the result of giving approval is that the beneficiaries will be unable thereafter to complain that the exercise is a breach of trust or even to set it aside as flawed; they are unlikely to have the same advantages of cross-examination or disclosure of the trustees' deliberations as they would have in such proceedings. If the court is left in doubt on the evidence as to the propriety of the trustees' proposal it will withhold its approval (though doing so will not be the same thing as prohibiting the exercise proposed). Hence it seems that, as is true when they surrender their discretion, they must put before the court all relevant considerations supported by evidence. In our view that will include a disclosure of their reasons, though otherwise they are not obliged to make such disclosure, since the reasons will necessarily be material to the court's assessment of the proposed exercise."
Similar (albeit expanded) observations appear in the current (19th) edition of Lewin on Trusts at paras 27-078 to 27-081.
Direction