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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 >> Hope v Revenue And Customs [2017] EWHC 812 (Ch) (06 April 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/812.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 812 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BANKRUPTCY COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
EMMA MARY CONSTANCE HOPE |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Defendant |
____________________
Mark Mullen (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 28 March 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Registrar Briggs:
Introduction
The factual background
"Since 1985 Miss Hope has made her living as a shoe designer, based in the UK. For over 25 years, the shoes have been made in factories outside the UK (usually located in Italy) which then ship direct to her customers around the world. For the last 20 years the same factories have shipped shoes to her retail stores in London. So, there were and are both wholesale and retail businesses. Until November 2007, Miss Hope operated as a sole trader. On 30th November 2007 she transferred her business as a going concern to Emma Hope Shoes Limited. This company went into liquidation in April 2009. Since then the business has operated through a company called Emma Hope Limited"
"On the 8th January 2007 an officer of HMRC, Surinder Aulak, visited Miss Hope to carry out a VAT audit…..After that visit and audit, correspondence ensued between HMRC and Miss Hope and her advisers. Requests for information were made by HMRC, information was provided and the correspondence carried on throughout 2007…."
"On 5 October 2015 the Claimant was notified by the Court of Appeal that her application to re-open her appeal could not be made under CPR 52.17. The Court of Appeal informed the Claimant that she may have an alternative remedy namely to bring fresh proceedings to set aside the earlier judgment or judgments on the basis that they had been obtained by fraud."
The Part 7 Claim
"This case turns on a decision of Registrar Derrett on 13 May 2013 which I now seek to have set aside on the basis that it was obtained by fraud on the part of the Defendant."
"Registrar Derrett concluded that the attempt by Miss Hope to challenge HMRC's debt in the manner in which she did by the application to the Court and then to appeal the assessments was in some respects misconceived: [25]. The Registrar also concluded that the appeal in relation to the amount of the tax due was entirely a separate matter ([25]) and that the two alternatives had been brought together in a manner that was not appropriate: [25]. Registrar Derrett also relied upon Miss Hope's failure to appeal the 2007 Assessment until 2010 and the time it took her advisers to establish what the case was as to why VAT was not due and that the responsibility for this fell at her door: [27]. Registrar Derrett ordered Miss Hope to pay HMRC's costs…"
"The rights and wrongs of the 2007 Assessment and the 2010 Assessment are hotly contested by Miss Hope and HMRC. Miss Hope says that she has been vindicated because the two Assessments were withdrawn. I can see that, as a result, she no doubt feels that she has suffered a serious injustice at the hands of HMRC because it was the 2007 Assessment which led to, or more accurately contributed to, the defeat of the IVA proposals. In contrast HMRC says that both Assessments were properly made and that Miss Hope (and her advisors) brought everything on herself (and their client) by providing inadequate information and not appealing the Assessments in a timely fashion."
"In its conduct leading up to the creditors meeting, HMRC stated by its representative Dick Ivory that it would use the full vote available to it to enforce its claims under the 2007 and 2010 Assessments against me regardless of whatever evidence was presented to them to the contrary. This demonstrates an irrational and/or vindictive determination by HMRC to bring about my bankruptcy, regardless of the merits of their claims. This constituted bad faith of HMRC's office tantamount to fraud."
The issues
19.1 Whether Miss Hope has a real prospect of showing that the Registrar Derrett was misled by conscious and deliberate dishonesty; and such conscious and deliberate dishonesty was material to the Court's decisions (the "Fraud Claim");
19.2 Whether the claim is an abuse of process on the grounds of issue estoppel, either on the basis of res judicata or the extended principle in Henderson v Henderson.
19.3 Whether HMRC is in breach of a statutory or common law duty to Miss Hope or liable for misfeasance in public office so as to found a claim for damages ('the Tort Claim').
19.4 Whether HMRC are estopped from denying that the assessments were issued negligently and/or without meeting the required standard of best judgment.
19.5 Whether the loss claimed by Miss Hope, or any part of it, is merely the reflective loss of her company.
19.6 Whether Miss Hope's claim is sufficient to extinguish the petition debt.
19.7 Whether the Fraud Claim and/or the Tort Claim are time-barred.
19.8 And whether, to the extent that the claim as a whole is not struck out or disposed of by way of summary judgment, the particulars of claim in any event obstruct the just disposal of the claim by reason of incoherence and/or failure properly to particularise Miss Hope's case.
Strike-out/Summary Judgment
"that the statement of case discloses no reasonable grounds for bringing or defending the claim;
that the statement of case is an abuse of the court's process or is otherwise likely to obstruct the just disposal of the proceedings; or
that there has been a failure to comply with a rule, practice direction or court order.
When the court strikes out a statement of case it may make any consequential order it considers appropriate."
" …that does not mean that the court has to accept without analysis everything said by a party in his statements before the court. In some cases it may be clear that there is no real substance in factual assertions made, particularly if contradicted by contemporary documents. If so, issues which are dependent upon those factual assertions may be susceptible of disposal at an early stage so as to save the cost and delay of trying an issue the outcome of which is inevitable" see ED&F Man Liquid Products Ltd v Patel and another [2003] EWCA Civ 472 at paragraph 10
"It is well established that in order to defeat an application for summary judgment it is enough for the Defendant to show a prospect of success which is real in the sense of not being false, fanciful or imaginary. However, the burden on the Defendant is at most an evidential one. The overall burden of proof rests on the Claimant to establish, if it can, the negative proposition that the Defendant has no real prospect of success. . . . and that there is no other reason for a trial. Regard must also be had to the overriding objective of dealing with the case justly. The court should not hesitate to give summary judgment in a plain case, and if the case turns on a pure point of law, it may determine that point. However, the court has often been enjoined not to conduct a mini-trial on the documents, without discovery and oral evidence . . . ."
The judgments, the Audit Report and post report events.
"The assessments which formed the subject matter of the claims brought by HMRC merit some consideration albeit, in my view limited consideration. It is right to say that the 2007 Assessment arose following visits to Miss Hope's premises by the tax inspector in 2007. He identified certain discrepancies between the accounts and the VAT returns. The discrepancy was initially explained by Miss Hope's advisors as arising from 'exports' to non-European countries or to European countries where no VAT number was available. I have been taken to the correspondence passing between HMRC and Miss Hope's advisers of which there was a considerable amount, from which it is apparent that this 'exports' explanation was pursued in that correspondence to explain the discrepancy but no supporting information or documentation was provided to show that these transactions were zero-rated, despite requests in 2007 and thereafter. It has been suggested by counsel for Miss Hope that the officer who attended the premises should have realised that there was an explanation for these discrepancies from an analysis of the supporting documents. I do not accept that as being a realistic proposition. The officer identified discrepancies and he asked for an explanation. The reason that no supporting information was provided became apparent from the fact that in about 2009 Miss Hope's advisors appear to have realised that this explanation was wrong….. in my judgment Miss Hope and her advisers have largely brought about the delay by failing to give the correct explanation for the discrepancies and then taking some two years to produce the documentary evidence to support the alternative explanation."
"HMRC did not raise and/or maintain the VAT assessments to the best of their judgment because:
"The 2007 Assessment was raised solely upon the difference in the turnover between management accounts (described as exports) and submitted VAT returns. HMRC Officer Aulak who issued the assessment noted during his visit to Emma Hope on 8 January 2007 that the SAGE report for VAT Periods 04/07 and 07/07 included sales which were outside the scope of VAT….He then noted for VAT Periods 07/05 and 10/05 wholesale supplies had been purchased from Italian suppliers and sold to non-UK customers without entering the UK and therefore outside the scope of VAT (VAT is charged on the supply of goods or services made in the UK- s 1 VAT Act 1994; goods not removed from or to the UK and not in the UK at the time of supply are treated as supplied outside the UK- s7(2) VAT Act 1994"
The Audit Report
"Basic checks P04/04 & P07/04. Checked D print to VAT return & back to VAT detailed listings (for O/T I/T, Net outputs & net inputs)
Various adjustments made to SAGE VAT summary figure as the SAGE report is picking up all the sales/purchases (including outside the scope sales/purchases) and trader is adjusting the VAT return figures to exclude these. Trader explained the I/T figures and these were traced back to the VAT return amounts. Traced back as far as possible to the net inputs/outputs figures. Also traced the EC acquisitions figures back to the intrastate figures- satisfied.
P07/04 trader to explain why O/T increased by £1103.09, I/T decreased by £1,376.11 & where they got the figures for the import VAT of £998.09 – no explanation received but now out of time therefore no further action taken."
Events following the audit report
"on 23 January 2007 Mr Aulak wrote to Marilyn Sugden, who I understand (based on the VAT Audit Report) to have been the Finance Manager for Emma Hope Shoes. Mr Aulak set out a number of outstanding points…..[and] requested an explanation"
"On 1 March 2007, Mark Hancox (who identifies himself within the correspondence as the Finance Manager of Emma Hope Shoes) responded to Mr Aulak. No explanation was provided by Mr Hancox in respect of the discrepancies identified. Mr Aulak responded on 2 April 2007, but did not received a response and so sent a chasing letter on 3 July 2007 Mr Aulak did not receive a response and so sent a further letter on 21 September 2007 indicating that he would be issuing a VAT assessment in respect of (amongst other matters) the discrepancies identified. On 11 December 2007, a VAT assessment was issued to Ms Hope in the amount of £120,725.54 (being the 2007 Assessment). The notification of assessment was sent on 27 November 2007.
On 29 May 2008, Richard Anthony & Company ("Richard Antony") wrote to HMRC on behalf of Ms Hope in respect of the 2007 Assessment. Their explanation of the discrepancies was as follows:
"We understand that the figure disclosed as turnover on the VAT Returns only related to UK sales turnover and that the difference relates to export sales, either to non European countries or European countries where VAT numbers were available".
"We understand that the figure disclosed as turnover on the VAT Returns only related to UK sales turnover and that the difference relates to export sales. Either to non European countries or to European countries where VAT numbers were available".
"You have stated that you understand the differences between the declared turnover on the VAT returns and the turnover declared on the annual accounts relate to export sales either to non European countries or to European countries where VAT numbers were available. Please now forward a reconciliation/breakdown of these amounts so that I can check and confirm these figures. On receipt of this information I will be in a position to review my assessment. If the assessment is subsequently reduced any further interest charged in respect of the VAT assessment will be reviewed at that stage. Please note that in future your client must ensure that all export sales to both European and non European countries are included in box 6 of the VAT return. I have forward your appeal against the penalties and surcharge to my colleagues in the Default Surcharge Appeals team and they will liaise directly with you regarding this matter."
"Up until September 2007, and for the previous 22 years, I had always paid creditors as and when they fell due. Despite difficult trading in certain years after the London bombings in July 2005 and the extension of the congestion charge in West London in 2007, the business traded profitably and had built up a customer base and a business with a turnover of between £4-5 million on very little outside investment. In order to be able to bring in a small amount of outside investment through offering shares, Emma Hope Shoes Ltd started trading in November 2007. The assets of stock from me trading as Emma Hope Shoes were transferred to the new company Emma Hope Shoes Ltd. However the outstanding debts to HMR Revenue and Customs of approximately £180,000 remained with me as well as the trade creditors."
"Mr Hancock (sic) stated he was still working on providing the information requested and has established that the goods went into a bonded warehouse. I asked why they needed to go into a bonded warehouse. He stated he was unsure whether they were under bond or not, but they went into a warehouse. I stated that this did not change the fact that they still required the evidence of export in order to zero rate the sales. He stated that it was the warehouses (sic) responsibility and that we should be requesting information from them. I stated that the warehouse would not do anything other than store the goods unless directed and paid to do so….I stated that in order to qualify for zero rating they would still need to obtain evidence that the goods were being removed from the warehouse for export…"
"It is now apparent that the debts to the Italian suppliers are deemed legally due from the debtor personally. As such the debtor must also be deemed to have continued trading for the VAT registration used to be valid. Correspondence from Mr Hancock (sic) to the VAT office confirms that the debtor knows that VAT was incorrectly attributed to the Company and that records need to be amended to attribute these liabilities to her personally and has requested to re-register her de registered VAT number…..Once these records are corrected the VAT liability due from the debtor will be significantly increased as such in the interim the VAT liability due has now been recalculated and is included in HMRC's voting claim."
"The VAT claim of £332,538.52 is disputed in part to the amount of £120,725.54. This represents a mistake on the completion of the VAT returns, details of which HMR&C are well aware. HMR&C maintains that insufficient evidence has been produced by Emma to support her contention that goods supplied from abroad were all EU sourced. We are trying to get all the papers which are present in archive available but Emma's position is that if the form had been correctly completed by her accounts department no VAT was payable and that sum is therefore no due from her." (sic)
"On 2 July, a series of e-mails were received from Mr Hancox. Attached to these e-mails were scanned bills of lading and consignment notes obtained from the Italian warehouse. Examination of the attachments showed that there were insufficient details on the documentation to support the zero-rating of the supply. Nor were there sufficient examples to support all the transactions on the spreadsheet submitted. Also included in the documents were consignment notes to addresses within the UK. There appeared to be evidence of a tri-angulation of some of the supplies, between Miss Hope, her customer and the Italian suppliers. However, the EC Article 28 Simplification Invoice statement did not feature on any of the invoices provided and, as stated previously, no EC VAT registration number was provided for the customers, as required. Subsequently conversations with Mr Welby of BDO Stoy Hayward, suggested that he had been informed that ALL of the transactions were outside the scope of UK VAT. Being supplies made directly from the Italian suppliers to Miss Hope's customers in other EC member states or outside the EC. Mr Welby was advised that the Commissioners did not dispute that supplies wholly outside of the UK were not subject to UK Value Added Tax, however, the volume and value of these supplies, together with suitable evidence had not been provided."
"Accepting, Mr Welby's statement that this listing contains "all the sales outside the UK" this then leaves the UK sales, included on Mr Hancox's schedule and described as "not originally included in the VAT returns. No explanation of what has happened with these transactions has yet been received…..The in-house accountant Mr Hancox, produced a schedule of transactions, which did not form part of the original VAT returns that significantly exceeded the original differences between the two declarations submitted by Emma Hope Shoes to the relevant sections of HMRC based on the same business records. Finally Mr Welby has put forward a third scenario, which may well be valid, but only addresses a portion of the transactions provided by Mr Hancox. The Commissioners have maintained the original assessment on the ledger as being due as to date no full and final explanation of the anomalies has been provided upon which to justify withdrawal/amendment or replacement of this assessment."
"Miss Hope in due course appealed the two assessments….As a result of evidence provided by Miss Hope's representatives during the course of the appeal and at a meeting between Mr Neal of HMRC and Mr Welby of BDO Stoy Hayward LLP on 2 August 2011, the 2007 Assessment was withdrawn…..This evidence was sufficient to demonstrate that the supplies in respect of which the 2007 Assessment had been raised had been conducted outside of the United Kingdom."
56.1 HMRC withheld a VAT Audit Report which 'shows that I had provided in January 2007 the information which HMRC said was not furnished by me until August 2011' and HMRC 'deliberately lied to the court (by Dave Neil's 2nd witness statement of 29 April 2013) in stating "at no point prior to [2 August 2011] was this evidence provided"';
56.2 HMRC 'deliberately misrepresented to the court and to me that the 2007 Assessment was not under appeal at the time of the 2009 IVA creditors meeting'; and
56.3 HMRC 'deliberately misrepresented to the court and to me that the 2010 Assessment was not withdrawn when in fact it was'.
57 HMRC's position is that the facts presented to the court now are the same as those known at the time of the hearing before Registrar Derrett. The Registrar was entitled to make the findings she made in the conduct of her judicial office, the findings arose from the correspondence and documents presented to the court which were unanswerable and the appellate court found the findings were safe. There was a failure to raise any allegations of fraud at the hearing or at the subsequent appeal. To do so now amounts to an abuse of process. In addition, Mr Mullen submits that the particulars disclose no reasonable cause of action in that they do not demonstrate any duty owed to Miss Hope, or breach of duty causing loss to her. It is also said that from December 2007 Miss Hope conducted the business, which she had carried on as a sole trader, through a limited company. Any losses relating to events from December 2007 would have been sustained by the corporate vehicle, not Miss Hope personally.
The claim of fraud
"The contentions on behalf of the taxpayer in this case can be summarised by saying that on the facts before the tribunal it is clear, so it is contended, that the assessment in question was not valid because the commissioners had taken insufficient steps to ascertain the amount of tax due before making the assessment…..[I]t should be recognised, particularly bearing in mind the primary obligation to which I have made reference, of the taxpayer to make a return himself, that the commissioners should not be required to do the work for the taxpayer in order to form a conclusion as to the amount of tax which, to the best of their judgment, is due…"
"12 .....I have to remind myself (as Miss Markham has submitted) that authority clearly establishes that, where assessments to tax are concerned, Parliament has provided a clear and exclusive machinery for considering appeals against them. The statutory machinery does provide for appeals to court. That machinery, as Miss Markham correctly submits, is an exclusive machinery and an assessment, when made, is final and binding if it is not appealed. If it is appealed, the determination of an appeal is likewise final and binding, subject to any application there may be, in appropriate circumstances, to the court. In particular, she submits, it is not for the Bankruptcy Court to go behind those matters. As Miss Markham also submits, there is a wealth of authority to that effect, stretching back (in relation to the predecessors of the current legislation) to the latter part of the 19th century.
13. Miss Markham is correct in that submission. It is not open to the Bankruptcy Court to review the manner in which the assessment has been made, much less to investigate the merits of the assessment. I can see that if there were evidence that the assessments had been made in some fraudulent or collusive way, or there were some other glaring miscarriage of justice, it might be that the Bankruptcy Court could go behind the assessment and not make the Bankruptcy Order based upon the debt created by the unpaid tax resulting from the assessment, but there is no suggestion of that in this case. On the contrary, as I have endeavoured to show, the Revenue have entertained attempts by Mr. Lam, personally and through advisers, to reconsider the amount of the assessments, but have not been persuaded on the information that has been provided that they should do so."
Factual findings
Misfeasance in public office
71.1 an act, conduct or omission that is done by a public officer
71.2 in the purported discharge of his public duties;
71.3 the act, conduct or omission is unlawful or otherwise unauthorised and will probably injure the claimant (untargeted malice) or the act, conduct or omission is intended to injure the claimant (targeted malice); and
71.4 damage is caused to the claimant as a result of the above
Breach of statutory duty
'The principles applicable in determining whether such statutory cause of action exists are now well established, although the application of those principles in any particular case remains difficult. The basic proposition is that in the ordinary case a breach of statutory duty does not, by itself, give rise to any private law cause of action. However a private law cause of action will arise if it can be shown, as a matter of construction of the statute, that the statutory duty was imposed for the protection of a limited class of the public and that Parliament intended to confer on members of that class a private right of action for breach of the duty. There is no general rule by reference to which it can be decided whether a statute does create such a right of action but there are a number of indicators. If the statute provides no other remedy for its breach and the Parliamentary intention to protect a limited class is shown, that indicates that there may be a private right of action since otherwise there is no method of securing the protection the statute was intended to confer. If the statute does provide some other means of enforcing the duty that will normally indicate that the statutory right was intended to be enforceable by those means and not by private right of action'
Common law duty of care
"[98] The circumstances in which a public authority, when exercising statutory functions, may be held liable in negligence are circumscribed and have been the subject of much judicial authority over the last 15 years. …..
[99] A number of principles are established. First, in the case of a statutory duty, if, as a matter of construction, there is no cause of action for the distinct tort of breach of statutory duty, carelessness in the performance of that duty does not of itself give rise to liability in negligence: Stovin v Wise per Lord Hoffmann at 952H-953A and Gorringe per Lord Scott at para 71. Similarly in the case of a statutory power, a common law duty of care cannot be founded simply upon a failure – even a Wednesbury unreasonable failure – to provide some benefit which a public authority has power (or even a public law duty) to provide: Gorringe per Lord Hoffmann at para 32. The Defendant places substantial reliance upon these first two principles (as did Chadwick LJ in Martin at paras 34, 62).
[100] Thirdly, however, the fact that a public authority is exercising a statutory power or duty (statutory function) does not preclude the existence of a common law duty. Whether such a common law duty does arise is determined, in general, by the application of general principles of the law of negligence, but subject to specific considerations arising from the public law dimension and the particular statutory framework (Martin at para 32). These general principles have three strands: (1) the three-stage test in Caparo Industries Ltd v Dickman [1990] 2 AC 605 (foreseeability of damage, proximity and whether the imposition of a duty is "fair, just and reasonable"); (2) voluntary assumption of responsibility; (3) whether a duty can be established "incrementally" by reference to established categories of duty. See Customs and Excise Commissioners v Barclays Bank plc [2007] AC 181 at para 4.
[101] Fourthly, if the relationship between the Claimant and the Defendant is such as to attract, prima facie, a duty of care, it must be further considered whether the particular statutory framework and the fact that Defendant was discharging a statutory function or exercising a statutory power modifies or excludes the common law duty of care. The criteria by which to make such a judgment have been stated in various ways: for example, it has been said that certain types of decision are "non-justiciable" and one test for determining what is justiciable has been to distinguish between "policy" decisions and "operational/administrative implementation" decisions. But this approach has not been uniformly adopted. More recently, these factors have been regarded as part of the analysis under the third "fair just and reasonable" stage of the Caparo test."
Estoppel
82.1 once a cause of action has been held to exist or not to exist, that outcome may not be challenged by either party in subsequent proceedings.
82.2 where the claimant succeeded in the first action and does not challenge the outcome, he may not bring a second action on the same cause of action.
82.3 The doctrine of merger…treats a cause of action as extinguished once judgment has been given on it, and the claimant's sole right as being a right on the judgment.
82.4 [estoppel arises] even where the cause of action is not the same in the later action as it was in the earlier one, but some issue which is necessarily common to both was decided on the earlier occasion and is binding on the parties.
82.5 The principle first formulated by Wigram V-C in Henderson v Henderson (1843) 3 Hare 100, 115, which precludes a party from raising in subsequent proceedings matters which were not, but could and should have been raised in the earlier ones.
82.6 Finally, there is the more general procedural rule against abusive proceedings, which may be regarded as the policy underlying all of the above principles.
Conclusion